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and I thought that was early.
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Seriously, though, as long as there is no snow or ice on the field, NCAA ball goes forward. My coldest game ever was only three years ago when I had a noncon D-III doubleheader (two 7-inning games). Game time temp was 31 degrees! Wind chills were in the lower teens, and it WAS windy. The coaches demanded a ground rule that the 4-feet high frozen snow drifts--really ice drifts--that lined the perimeter of the park in foul terriroty were dead ball areas for the purposes of catching a foul ball. Fielders could lean on them but not run up and onto the mountains of ice and snow to catch balls. It was a noncon game, so in the plate meeting before the first game of that brutally cold and windy day, I came right out and said, "All right guys. We'll be using a 10-run rule effective after regulation in each of these 7-inning games." The home team's head coach looks at me then his counterpart and groans, "Aw, it's the first home game of the season for us. We'd like to get in a full game and..." My partner interrupts him with, "It's the first game of the season for us, too. We're here to work and have a bit of fun. We've driven all this way to do some ball games, so let's skip the 10-run rule." Oh! Was I pissed! Now, I usually don't ***** when a 10-run rule is not used, but when it's either 110 or 15 outside, I say use it! I could have easily beaten my partner silly for being so stupid! And HE'S a guy who thinks his **** doesn't stink and who thinks he's God's greatest gift to umpiring. BTW, the score of the first game was 17-1. It took well over 3 hours. The home team did win, though. Big deal. At the end of 4 1/2 innings, I looked at my little time piece and saw that we could have been done in just under 90 minutes at that point. After we were done for the day, I shot my partner and left him to die in the frozen tundra. Serves him right. |
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