Quote:
Originally Posted by chapmaja
I've actually had a similar situation but in a one man game. There was a temporary fence placed down the right field line for about 40 feet from the line into fair territory. The rest of the field was open. This fence was only about 2 feet high because it was partially knocked down. In front of the fence about 5 feet was a man hole cover. Behind the fence about the same distance was another man hole cover. Fly ball down into that corner. I hear the ball hit a man hole cover and it takes a high bounce. I thought it was short of the fence but the right fielder cut right in front of my view just as the ball was coming down. The defense starts screaming it hit short of the fence and bounced. I did not make a call at first, except dead ball, because I wanted to go out and see what I heard it hit. Sure enough that's when I saw the two man hole covers. I had to rule a GR double based on what I thought I was and based on the fact the noise could have come from it hitting on either side of the fence.
Now the OC is pissed and let's me know he disagrees with the call. The only good thing was the next batter hit a ball down the same line that hit the roof of the building about 40 feet behind the fence. That calmed the coach a little bit since the run still scored anyway.
Now as for your situation. Did your partner go out into the field on the fly ball? If he did, it is his call and his situation (mess) to deal with. He has to make the call and live with his decision. Your objective simply becomes to assist if asked and keep everyone else back if the coach really goes after the umpire. Based on what you describe, the coach should be been tossed, at which time then the second umpire can step in and try to get the coach to walk away.
Now for MD's comments. I was actually in the situation where my partner was a new umpire and an 18 year old girl. This was a MS aged Rec game. One of the coaches strongly disagreed with the call at the plate and was really letting my partner know about his displeasure. He was getting way closer than a coach should be getting to an umpire so I decided to step in on that and separate them. Just as I separated them, my partner did eject the coach from the game, so now I was trying to separate the ejected coach from the umpire anyway.
I do look at who I am working with if a situation arises with a pissed off coach or player and a partner. If I am working with Brian (former prison guard and about 6-7 350, I'm letting him handle it himself). If I'm working with Lisa who might be 5-0 and 100 pounds, I'm getting myself in a lot closer to the situation.
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Unless you think there's a good chance of situation turning phyisical, I don't know what it matters whether it's Lisa or Brian. Physical stature rarely has much to do with how a coach deals with an umpire.
If you do think it's going to get physical, probably best to call the police.