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You adjust your zone, evenly, for both teams!
My interpretation that seems to work is to go a tad higher and wider. Not much, just a couple of inches. Those other standards you listed are for regular games, NOT lopsided games. But in the lopsided game, you need to expand a bit to keep things going. We have a lot of D III around here, and the pitching isn't so hot, so the games tend to have a LOT of runs. ![]() |
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Well that's what it says!
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"Has a grasp of how the zone can be adjusted in lopsided game." I don't think that anybody considers a 6 run deficit to be "lopsided." Lopsided is usually 10 runs or more behind. And maybe lawump had a big strike zone to start with, and couldn't have widened it out more than it already was. How about it, lawump? ![]()
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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After Bob asked my Dad who he was with (and my dad said the umpire), Bob cracked a joke. He said, "If your son was umpiring 10 years ago, I'd still be in the major leagues!" ![]() |
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