Quote:
Originally Posted by Tim C
"When I work 3 man, most weekends, and I am forced to go to deep C, left handed hitter, . . . "
Are you saying that the handedness of the hitter dictates where you locate yourself as a base umpire?
If that is what you are saying could you direct me to a place in either the NAPL manual, the CCA Mechanics Manual, or the NFHS Umpire manual that offer this as an accepted mechanic?
Thanks,
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The 2006 CCA shows everything from C or deep C, however on page 121 it states
,"U3 has the option to position himself on either side of second basewith a right-handed batter. This optional position may be used with conference coordinator approval."
I think that the thought process here is much like U2 positioning in 4 man in MLB when U2 is in the outfield, U2 goes opposite the hitter's handedness for a better angle on a HR ball. The idea as I have been taught is getting away from a pull hitters strength. Right or wrong that is the thought process.
I can tell you that all five conference coordinators on the west coast have us using this. I was corrected on my second series of the year by my crew chief for trying to stay in deep B with a left handed batter and a runner on 1st. I knew why he corrected me before he told me, but I think C is a ****ty place to be on a steal play, so I was taught to swing back into the dirt to get the angle I need, like working the plate.