Warning: Story contains coarse language

The Houston Astros lost a back-and-forth game at Coors Field on Wednesday night - one that involved two separate crazy plays, the first of which made third baseman Alex Bregman awfully upset.

With Houston leading the Colorado Rockies by a 2-1 score in the sixth inning, the 24-year-old came inches away from a home run before appearing to settle for a triple. However, Bregman was ruled out upon video review, as it was determined that a fan had reached over the wall and interfered with the ball as outfielder Gerardo Parra tried to make the catch.

Bregman triples, fan interference, out. Full video in our FaceBook group. Join here https://t.co/mlUS7rB6Wy pic.twitter.com/6CdMjenQiN — Stros Nation (@StrosNation) July 26, 2018

According to official Major League Baseball rules, "if spectator interference clearly prevents a fielder from catching a fly ball, the umpire shall declare the batter out," per Rule 6.01 (e).

However, despite the fan deflecting the ball as Parra attempted his catch, Bregman took issue with the decision based on the difficulty of the play.

"It was a f---ing joke, and they should be f---ing ashamed of themselves," Bregman said after the game of the umpiring crew led by Jerry Layne, per ESPN.

"Obviously, the guy has never played f---ing baseball before in his life, the guy in charge of whoever made that decision. There is no possible way you can say that a left fielder jumping backward into a wall is guaranteed to make a catch. It changed the whole f---ing game. We're up 2-1 at the time, I'm at third base. We need a fly ball to the outfield to get me in, and it's 3-1. It's f---ing horrible."

Bregman later responded to a reporter on Twitter who claimed he didn't know the rules.

Actually I do know the rule. I was saying that there is no way that you can say for certain he was going to catch that after slamming into the wall before the fan touched it. Go back to doing the weather for channel whatever. Why did you tag me? You want followers? — Alex Bregman (@ABREG_1) July 26, 2018

The Rockies would later tie the game on an extremely rare sacrifice fly to third baseman J.D. Davis during the seventh inning:

Later, Charlie Blackmon walked it off for Colorado with a ninth-inning blast off Collin McHugh.