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I'm 17 years old and next month I will be umpiring my first full season of baseball from ages 10-19. I've started looking for equipment and I was sondering if some of the veterans on here could answer a few questions for me. 1- Which would you recommend, the Davis feather (regular) mask or a hockey-style mask? 2- Is it true that the chest protector is the most valuable piece of equipment you can wear? 3- I'm looking at Davis shinguards that wrap around the knee and have an instep in them- good idea? 4- What kind of shoes would you recommend for the plate- steel toe or something else? 5- Is it worth it to buy combo pants or should a buy a pair each of plate and base pants?
If anybody has any other equipment advice I'd love to hear it. thanks
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Throwing people out of a game is like riding a bike- once you get the hang of it, it can be a lot of fun.- Ron Luciano |
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I'll assume that you will continue with umpiring.
Buy the best mask and chest protector you can afford. If you need to skimp, you can go cheap on the shinguards...they all work. Buy plate shoes, Honigs, Davis, whatever. Don't try to get by on just steel toed shoes. I have thin legs and no butt, so in the past I have used combo pants as plate pants, but I would never wear them on the bases. Currently I use plate pants and base pants. Hockey Mask? Sure, if you want. I tried one and didn't care for it but I know several umpires who swear by them. They are still in the minority, but in 10 years they will probably be in the majority. Undershirts...McDavids or Nike or Underarmour...something that will wick the sweat away from your body.
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GB |
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" but I know some guys who work cupless "
Un-effing-believable. I puckered in my chair just reading that. I've got blasted twice this week, so working without being properly equipt is just NUTS to me. Are these geldings we're talking about? |
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I had believed I could shield those balls with my hand. I have been hit once just about 2 inches bellow belt without wearing cup. It was high ball tipped down. Result was 15 minutes delay in game and next 20 hours in pain. I am playing besaball without cup (even warmup catching), practising karate without cup but I will never ever again umpire without the cup. Believe me.
BTW consider http://www.lestersupstatesports.com/ Good price, nice people. [Edited by Roman Konecny on Mar 8th, 2005 at 05:01 AM] |
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Some good advice on equipment from the others in the above posts. What else do you need?
1. Get a rule book ans STUDY it! 2. Observe veteran umpires whenever possible (good ones please). 3. Watch games above the level you are doing - example if you do LL, watch High School umpires. 4. Practice your timing until you can't stand it anymore! 5. You're 17 huh? Grow at least 3 more layers of thick skin so you can ignore the idiots from the stands. 8. There is no prize for throwing out players or coaches at the end of the year. 7. Remember you are an offical - the coach may be an idiot, but you are a step above. Act accordingly and you'll so alright.
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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Equipment For A Rookie
Re: combo pants. I like 'em and I use 'em. However, doing the plate in hot weather, I soak through the top several inches of pants, sometimes down to about crotch level. Thus, I can't/don't use combo pants for hot weather doubles (triples, quadruples) because I'd have to change them anyway.
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Ozzy6900 Some good advice on equipment from the others in the above posts. What else do you need? 1. Get a rule book ans STUDY it! -Shouldn't be a problem since I got a 98 on our rules test. 3. Watch games above the level you are doing - example if you do LL, watch High School umpires. -Shouldn't be a problem either since I play HS baseball. 5. You're 17 huh? Grow at least 3 more layers of thick skin so you can ignore the idiots from the stands. -I've only been umpiring for 3 years but I've learned that laughing at those idiots is better than listening to them. 7. Remember you are an offical - the coach may be an idiot, but you are a step above. Act accordingly and you'll so alright. -My supervisors keep harping on that and the knowledge of the rules. You gave me a lot of good stuff. Thanks
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Throwing people out of a game is like riding a bike- once you get the hang of it, it can be a lot of fun.- Ron Luciano |
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My best recommendation for new umpires is to look on E-bay for your first set of gear. You can save 1 or 2 HUNDRED dollars by buying equipment from guys who umpired for one year and are then selling their stuff. I paid $88 w/shipping for a mask, pretty decent chest protector, and shin guards (with ball bag and indiclicker thrown in) my first year.
I kept watching on E-bay and got a pro-level set of shin guards for $28 and love 'em.
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Well I am certainly wiser than this man. It is only too likely that neither of us has any knowledge to boast of; but he thinks that he knows something which he does not know, whereas I am quite conscious of my ignorance. At any rate it seems that I am wiser than he is to this small extent, that I do not think that I know what I do not know. ~Socrates |
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I would buy from Gerry Davis or Honig's. Both places have pretty good packages set up. |
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I am also 17 and this will be my 5th year umpiring. In Illinois, at 17, you can become IHSA certified and make more money. That also means you need your own equipment. (Before, the place a umpired had a couple of sets of (pretty crappy) equipment for use) I have been looking around and the hardest thing for me is the shoes. The biggest problem may be that I wear a size 14. So I have a few questions.
1. What do you suggest for shoes for plate and bases? (brand, high-top, low-top, etc.) 2. What chest protector do you suggest? (west vest?) 3. Has anyone heard of the Rawlings CP9500 Umpire's Vest Style Chest Protector? What do you think? 4. I am having trouble finding stores that carry this stuff (I plan on ordering online, but I need to try these things for size). What national chains carry these things?
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I occasionally get birthday cards from fans. But it's often the same message: they hope it's my last. -Al Forman, umpire The toughest call an umpire has to make is not the half-swing; the toughest call is throwing a guy out of the game after you blew the hell out of the play. -Johny Rice, umpire |
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Jason,
I too am of the large nature and have a 14 shoe. I just got my equipment for the first time a few weeks ago and i purchased the following: Plate Shoes: Tanel 360 Chest Protector: Wilson Chest Protector I bought this stuff at a local Umpire/Referee store, but there are several good websites out there that sell these things like: http://www.gerrydavis.com http://www.honigs.com http://www.pluspos.com http://www.wasupply.com |
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2) Yes - WV is the best. If you cannot afford it, I would look at the Honig's K1 or their Elite Equipment Package. Its a good deal with good quality gear. If youre looking at a WV, the Platinum is a good deal. Currently, Ump-Attire is running a special I think. 3) Never heard of it - Stick with Honigs or WV 4) Cant help you there. Honig's is awesome with returns & problems...I find their stuff to run true to size. [Edited by mrm21711 on Mar 20th, 2005 at 08:00 PM] |
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I feel the chest protector is most important. So many of the masks are too similar as long as you do not go too cheap. I personally use the hockey mask and love it as it takes and absorbs all of a foul ball shot and you will not feel a thing. Can be a little loud but not as bad as getting hit in the head with batting helmet on. The hockey mask usually have more foam that absorbs some of the sound.
chest protector I use the gray Wilson and the Cooper UMP1000. Depending on how tall your are will somewhat determine a 13, 13.5 or 14 inch protector. Shirts, If you use bicep protectors on your chest protector, then avoid Honigs shirts. They are good shirts but the sleeves are a little shorter and will not cover the bicep protectors. Use Cliff Keen shirts with them. Pants I use combos for plate and then I have base pants. Some plate pants can still look like bell bottomed, even with shin guards on. Shin guards get some that come up over the knee for certain. Shoes I use Honigs high tops plate shoes. Very light and awsome in protection. You want steel toes, not fiberglass like some of have. Field shoes I actually use Reeboks NFL shoes. I call football as well and I get a new pair for that season. I then use them for my base shoes. They have the best traction for all surfaces compared to any other base shoe I have seen. You can get them in all black or with some white on them. One thing not mentioned is your indicator. I use a 4 dial (balls, strikes, outs, inning) and I get one with bigger numbers. Some fields are not lit all that great and the small numbered indicators can be a pain to see. Ball bags I prefer ones that open easily with not too deep secondary pockets for your brush, indicator and pen/pencil. Some bags, these pockets go all the way down in and it can be a pain to get your brush or pen out. Honigs are my prefered there. As mentioned before Honigs, lesters or the referee call out of Oklahoma City are good. Pos make some good stuff but unless they have cleaned up their customer service issues, I would avoid them. You maybe ready for retirement before you get something you order thru them.
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Jim Need an out, get an out. Need a run, balk it in. |
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Thanks for your help guys. Could I also get a few more opinions on the shirts and pants? I don't really want to spend money on base and plate pants, so do the combo ones really work?? And is there a specific brand of combo pants that are best?? For shirts, I also noticed they sell plate and base shirts, is there a need for both? Thanks for your help again.
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I occasionally get birthday cards from fans. But it's often the same message: they hope it's my last. -Al Forman, umpire The toughest call an umpire has to make is not the half-swing; the toughest call is throwing a guy out of the game after you blew the hell out of the play. -Johny Rice, umpire |
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