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Old Mon May 09, 2005, 09:40am
mcrowder mcrowder is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Little Elm, TX (NW Dallas)
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Yes, it's true that you have a better view of the plate from behind the pitcher than behind the catcher. This is why, in games where the PU has almost no responsibilities other than balls/strikes, and plays at the plate, that he moves from behind the catcher to behind the pitcher. Surely we've all seen this done in MLB playoffs, when they work with 6 umpires, or in the NCAA College Softball playoffs, when they have 3 or 4.

Actually, the best view of the plate is from a bucket near either dugout.

Seriously - if your pitcher has ANY curve at all, you have NO chance of calling an accurate zone from behind the plate. You might survive a game when everything is perfectly straight, and every pitch is thrown from the center of the pitcher's plate. Maybe.
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