Quote:
Originally Posted by Rich
It communicates that I saw the bat move and that I judged it wasn't enough to consider it an offer.
I'm amazed at how many people act as if this isn't mainstream. This is the passage directly from the PBUC manual:
"All decisions on checked swings shall be called loudly and clearly by the plate umpire. If the pitch is a ball and the batter does not swing at the pitch, the mechanic to be used by the plate umpire is: "Ball; No he didn't go." If the pitch is a ball but the batter commits on the check swing, the mechanic to be used is: "Yes, he went," while pointing directly at the batter and then coming up with the strike motion."
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I think that it is a poor and unnecessary mechanic. In the very least, it is an overused and abused mechanic.
Define a checked swing for us. Not that I would use the LLWS umpires as a benchmark, but they were saying "Yes, he did" on "checked swings" where the batter clearly went. If there is a follow through, regardless of how weak it is, it's not a checked swing. A checked swing would require opposite torque in an effort not to complete the swing, no?