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Ok, I'm still not convinced it was enough
This is one tirade, granted. But on that video I saw:
1. An argument with a safe/out call that lasted too long. 2. Sliding into the second base bag, showing the umpire up. 3. Going to home plate and kicking dirt on the plate until it was completely covered. 4. Pouring the bottle of water on to the plate, making a mudpie. 5. Throwing bats out of the dugout. I'm probably missing something here. Any one of these 5, taken separately, was worth dumping him. So, in essence, he gets dumped 5 times, plus an extra two. I'd say 10 games, at least, without pay, plus the fine. It's subjective, I know. Sometimes it makes no rhyme or reason. Stackhouse gets called for an ordinary foul on Shaq. He's suspended. This idiot makes a mockery of the game and he sits for a week. Strikes and outs! |
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http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/news/g...=.jsp&c_id=tex |
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Peace
__________________
Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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For if you have, then you would be SHOCKED that he got 7 days and $1,000. I'm thinking it was only that long and that high because of the black eye the league took in the media. Here's a sample of my dealings with Mr. Moss. (Facts: I called the lead-off hitter for visiting Asheville out on strikes (3 pitches, 3 called strikes) to start the game. I called him out on strikes to end the third inning with runners on base (3 pitches, 3 called strikes). He took 5 fastballs and a breaking ball...and none were close to being a "ball". He goes into the dugout, starts yelling, tosses his helmet onto the field...at which point I dump him. He comes running out of the dugout, bumps me, has to be restrained by his teammates, goes and throws a gatorade cooler onto the field and then leaves. Because this is "non-routine" (bumping) I just can't write the report...I have to call the league President. Here is a paraphrase of my conversation with Mr. Moss. Me: "Mr. Moss, I'm calling to report a non-routine incident on the field today in Charleston (home team)." Mr. Moss (in a thick southern drawl): "Yes, I've already heard about it." Me: "Good sir. Then you know I was bumped today." Mr. Moss: "Son, what in the hell are you doing to my league?" Me: "Excuse me sir?" Mr. Moss: "Was the player in the dugout when you ejected him?" Me: "Well, yes sir. He tossed his helmet onto the field from the dugout." Mr. Moss: "But he was in the dugout?" Me: "Yes sir." Mr. Moss: "We don't need to go looking for troubles in the dugout. I don't want you tossing people from the dugout." Me: "Yes sir. Good-bye sir." [hangs up phone] Me (to partner in the room): "Its going to be a long season." |
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You're sh!tting me.
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I believe you, by the way. And frankly, it illuminates the whole sad situation. Strikes and outs! |
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sal it is pretty obvious that the pu was not in ear shot by watching the video.
im sure we can agree on this. maybe in those vides you mentioned no ump stepped in. but in the majority of cases i would bet a fellow umpire would step in, to at least make an attempt to try to difuse the situation. at least if the pu had been closer i doubt the manager would have walked past him to put on a show at the plate. |
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As I posted before, generally speaking, when a heated discussion is going on, the nearest umpire should walk (don't jog/run over towards the argument) and get in the vicinity to wear you can hear what's be said. Keep other coaches/players away from the discussion but don't involve yourself either. When the ejection happens, let the guys have their final say and then move in if necessary. That's my own personal opinion and guideline on handling arguments. Every situation is different and how I handle things in the Spring (NCAA) and how I go about things in the Summer (Indy Pro ball) are usually not the same. |
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Peace
__________________
Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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Sure are. (snipped remainder) The man is addled in the head. |
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Camp Example
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Hearing 'through the grapevine' that one of the attendees had been party to a serious blowup, they waited until he was on-field, and the instructor threw it all at him. At first, we stood around gasping and laughing hysterically, but it wouldn't stop! The instructor took all three bases back to the dugout, buried the rubber, tried to dig up the plate, threw his hat OVER the backstop, ran around and asked EACH PLAYER in the field about the call, and more! The ump remained still and silent, as the BU in this situation did, each time rotating around to face the coach when he returned to yell. After about 10 minutes (honestly), the instructor stopped cold. He walked calmly over to the ump and said "at what point are you going to do something? I can do this all day." But the real lesson came when he turned to address the other umpire. He looked him in the eye and said "Where were you? I didn't see you once. Get your a$$ next to your partner and don't let him out of arm's reach. " Sadly, the post-mortem on the incident happened behind closed doors, so we didn't get to hear what the instructors would have considered the 'perfect course of action', but needless to say, it wasn't the mannequin approach. Bainer.
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"I am a firm believer in the philosophy of a ruling class...Especially since I rule!" |
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