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A great point Carl
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BTW: I didn't know you were from Japan. When the gas was low on my Cavalier, a message popped up that said "Check gages." (big grin) On a serious note: The depth of the catcher and the strength of his mitt hand are often causes for an umpire's strike call to look bad on a pitch at the knees. Many "misses low" come in the late innings, when the catchers are tired. The pitch hits the front of the plate at the hollow of the knee (it's a strike), but the catcher is deeper in his box than usual or he lacks sufficient energy to "frame" the pitch. When the batter reacts to where the ball was caught.... I [usually] don't call that strike a strike unless one team leads by a bunch or it's in the late innings and, like the catcher, I'm tired. (another grin) [/QUOTE] I see this happen all the time and as Carl said, I usually will call it a ball, had two of them the other night and between innings the coach told me, "at least you're consistent blue". MLB is the same way, often times the catcher is lazy or tired and he fails to do his job, and it will catch the umpire off guard. Many times it gets the strike call, but a complaint from the batter or coach etc., Thanks David |
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