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Jaska Roder
Yes! Excellent for any level of umpire. In my third year now of umpiring at a serious level, its very helpful. They only have one version now. They have combined the two. I write them when I got mine, and Rick Roder explained that they just have the one edition now (RDE).
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J/R is an absolutely great tool for serious umpires at any level. I particularly like the electronic edition because of all the internal links and references. But I have the hard copy also for late night study and resolving problems at the field (in post-game discussions with my fellow umpires) and in chapter meetings.
Just be aware that J/R is written from the OBR respective (starting with OBR and citing differences in other books). I also highly recommend the BRD by my friend, Officiating.com Senior Editor Carl Childress. BRD starts with FED and cites differences with other codes. At least that is the way it seems to me. Both are excellent and highly useful tools in any serious umpires arsenal. BUT . . . The problem of the pitcher making a play using a multicolored glove (see thread) was inadequately addressed in either of these excellent books. Just proves that there is always something new in the great game of baseball.
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Herb McCown |
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Both the J/R and the BRD are terrific. To me, they're essential. I'd add the PBUC, too. All three books get you thinking about interesting wrinkles that the rule books just don't cover. The books are particularly useful for dealing with interference/obstruction, awards, and appeals.
As for whether they are helpful for an amateur umpire's rule interpretations—definitely. Even if you do only LL or even softball (which the books of course don't cover in any way), you still find yourself asking, "How would I call that play?" The answer will often be different for LL or softball, but it gets you thinking about the question just the same.
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greymule More whiskey—and fresh horses for my men! Roll Tide! |
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