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Man it's easy to tell you two aren't from the Midwest!
Here, we call it "pop." I remember once when I was working in Missisippi, I sat down at the counter in a little cafe. The man next to me asked for a "Coke." The lady tending the counter replied, "what flavor Coke you want?" The man told her, "I want me an Orange Coke." This was in the early 80's before Coke came out with all the different flavors. Tim. |
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My mom and dad were from Minnesota, and they called it "pop" too. I grew up calling it "pop" as well, even though I lived here, and other kids said "soda."
Having traveled the country a bit, I have heard the following terminology for flavored carbonated non-alcoholic beverages: Soda Pop Tonic Sody Fizzie water Coke Soda pop Seltzer I probably left out somebody's word for it. Any more?
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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As I mentioned earlier in this thread, the clinic was professional, and attended by umps from all different levels, including LL. Mike |
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Well,
I read this thread for the first time today. The reason I had not read it as the picture did not show up for me. I went to the thread with two separate computers both running diffeent bases. No picture.
Now TODAY, I open the thread and the picture is sitting there nice and purty!!! So: SanDiegoSteve wrote: "Way too far away on a tag play, gotta get your nose into it." Wrong, wrong, wrong. That is not true for EVERY single clinic and school I went to. When you "stick your nose in it" that is when a play can "blow up". Please ignore the advice to "stick your nose in it." No clinician will EVER give you that advice. Keep 10' to 15' from plays (force or slide and tag) and get the bigger picture. Tee |
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I have heard the axiom of "closer to a tag play, farther from a force play," in one form or the other, for as long as I can remember. Please don't disparage the experience I bring to the table. You do it the way you want to, but quit acting like you are some big expert, and any other method is wrong. Maybe no clinician you know would give this advice, but you certainly don't know every clinician. I do wish I still had my back issues of Referee Magazine from 1986 or 1987. I remember the exact wording. It was "stick your nose in a tag play."
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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15' is way too far away for a tag play, if you can get closer. If 15' is as close as you can get, fine. But if you have a close play on the way, and you can get in closer with a good angle, chances are you are going to see the play better than if you were far away. I don't care for 3BLX much myself, except for plays like the one illustrated here. You screen yourself off from the tag in 1BLX when the catcher moves too far into fair territory. My main concern is seeing the whole play, and being ready to move to whatever spot gives me the best look at it, whether it is 1BLX, 3BLX, or somewhere in between or to the outside.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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Re: Re: Well,
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2. I know of no published source that has been incorrect on rulings and mechanics more then Referee Magazine. 3. One doesn't have to know every clinician who exists to know the correct mechanic. Heck, I've only met five astronomers in person, but I know the earth revolves around the sun. 4. Steve, you need to step back and reflect when someone posts a correction to one of your beliefs. You have a knee jerk reaction that you can't possibly be wrong. You can be, and in this instance, you are.
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GB |
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...and right or wrong please don't be so sensitive. I hope your skin gets thicker when you hit the field.
And don't take someone else's credible opinion as the diametric opposite of yours. Nobody ever thought you would place your nose between the glove and the runner. There very well be a time where getting a closer look is not a bad tactic, but how close is too close. When the tag happens you need to be far enough away to see the continuing action following the tag. One may have to "get their nose in" on a play but if you are inside 6 (IMO, an absolute minimum) feet you are way too close. What can't one see from 6 feet away? D |
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Garth,
So you are saying that you should be absolutely no closer on a tag play than on a force? That goes against everything I was ever taught. I have never seen any umpire take a tag play from 15' or more away. Ever. At any level. You always see in close up photos of MLB plays at the plate, the catcher, the runner and the umpire in the same frame. If the umpire wasn't fairly close to the play he wouldn't be in the picture. I didn't mean to LITERALLY put your face between the glove and the runner and make an umpire sandwich. Just get in closer than on a force! 6 to 10 feet, depending on the type of play, is just fine. As long as you can see the whole play develop. It's like using a zoom lens...you don't want to cut out part of the picture, so you can't get TOO close. But you don't need a wide-angle lens like you need on a force play. The quote didn't come from the makers of Referee Magazine itself. It came from either A)Carl Childress or B)Jon Bible, the major contributors of the day. The article said that you should get closer to a tag play, and back away from a force force play. That is what the general idea was behind the "stick your nose into it" reference. If I am able to get in closer for a tag play, I do. If not, then I take what I can get. But if you have the time to get a better look, by all means you should do it. If you think I am going to sit back and reflect about someone telling me I've been taught wrong, and have been doing it wrong (and getting good ratings, making request lists, etc.) all these years, you need to think again. It gets real old to always be "corrected," as if I need the approval of certain people here. I've never had any evaluator come up to me and say, "Steve, you get too close on those tag plays, you might want to back up some!" I know what I have read, who I learned from, and what I have made a study of over the last 20 years, not to mention the many games I have worked. I have always been a real stickler for proper mechanics. I have worked hard on developing and honing my skills, and I am open to learning new things. But I don't like getting dismissed as "wrong" out of hand. I learned differently perhaps, but I wouldn't go so far as to say that I'm wrong. I have never had any trouble getting my calls right, and I get in excellent position to see them. Now, Garth, this was a calm, well thought out response, and not a "knee-jerk" reaction.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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When I hit the field, I don't have a group of nit-picky, overly critical, totally literal umpires bashing everything I do or say. So my skin is comfortably thick. I objected to the way Tee chose to give his "credible opinion." It was given by telling everyone to ignore what I said, as if I was a poisonous snake about to bite them. Certain people who post here have a way of coming off like fingernails on a blackboard. He is one of them. If you read my last post, you will see that what I meant by "sticking your nose into it" was that 6' to 10' is good for a tag, depending on the situation. Not "10' to 15' (same as a force play)" like Tee said. That is what I disagreed with, and with the way it was said.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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Cripes,
Let me make my comment clear . . . "crystal".
I have never been, nor do I ever PLAN to be closer than 10' from ANY call. We are taught over-and-over to not get to close to calls and let them "blow up" . . . if an umpire is properly trained and believes in "angle over distance" there really shouldn't be a disagreement with the distance from the play. No real trainer would ever tell an umpire to "stick his nose" into the play. You are simply wrong in your view . . . I can accept that but doubt seriously that an umpire that claims he is "good enough" to be an MLB umpire would ever "stick his nose into a play." Sorry, you lost yardage on this one, mate. Tee PS, if you don't like the way I post . . . tough cookies! T |
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In consideration of that, a friendly word of caution: Do not attend proschool or even a week-long "Evans Classic". If you are not open to criticism and correction, you will be ignored and you will have wasted your time and money. You have made it plain that there is no reason to post to you, Steve. You have admitted having a closed mind. "Now, Garth, this was a calm, well thought out response, and not a "knee-jerk" reaction." That makes it all the more disturbing. You find refusing to ever consider that you might be wrong as "well thought out". Enjoy your season. P.S. I never get closer than 10 t0 12' to any play. Tag plays can explode on you and 6' is just too close. When my eyesight gets so I can't see the ball from 12' to 15' away, I'll quit. [Edited by GarthB on Dec 27th, 2005 at 01:18 AM]
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GB |
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Too close ....
[QUOTE]Originally posted by GarthB
[B][QUOTE]Originally posted by SanDiegoSteve Garth, If you think I am going to sit back and reflect about someone telling me I've been taught wrong, and have been doing it wrong (and getting good ratings, making request lists, etc.) all these years, you need to think again. QUOTE] So, simply put, you're just not going to listen or take seriously anyone telling you that you are wrong or were trained wrong. In consideration of that, a friendly word of caution: Do not attend proschool or even a week-long "Evans Classic". If you are not open to criticism and correction, you will be ignored and you will have wasted your time and money. You have made it plain that there is no reason to post to you, Steve. You have admitted having a closed mind. Now, Garth, this was a calm, well thought out response, and not a "knee-jerk" reaction." What Tee and Garth said ... You are only looking for trouble if you are ever closer than 10' to a call as described. Personally, I like about 15' - you get a much better picture of the action. Thanks David |
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I don't doubt that you were taught "get your nose into the middle of the play." I accept that Carl or Jon wrote an article expounding that theory. I also think that most of us recognize that theories and teachings change over the years, and this might be one of those instances. Steve, when you work 3-umpire (or more) mechanics, and you are U1, how far from first do you stand with R1? This is one play that gives you plenty of time to be in the right position (you take the position well before any "play"), so I think that would give you guidance for *about* where you'd want to be on any other tag play. (Recognizing, of course, that you might not want to move closer because of the potentil for getting hit with a ball that gets by F3, but recognzing as well that this is as "repeatable" a situation you will find -- there's unlikely to be a collision, a swipe tag, a hurdle, an attempt to dislodge the ball, a late cut-off, .... -- all the potential items you see on other tag plays.) |
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