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GD Question(s)
Due to knee soreness developed in the college season I have been using the summer to try the GD stance. OK, but not in love with it yet. A question and a comment:
With my feet wide, I get the good head height etc., but (not like I'm athletic anyway) don't get out of the stance and to where I'm going on a hit ball like I used to. My old box stance, as we say in football, gave me an explosive first step. The wide stance doesn't. Am I doing something wrong? Even with the very wide stance I am looking down on the high strike (I'm already 3' behind the catcher, I back up more I lose the plate). From the box stance my high strike was set, it feels hard now to get both high and low strikes effectively. More experience, adjustments? Thanks. Edit: really two questions. |
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I do exactly what Brian says about getting out of the wide stance -- bring the right foot in to normal width and take off from there.
As for the comfort level in seeing the zone from that perspective -- it will come in time if you're working the stance correctly. When I switched to GD three years ago, it took about two or three games to really feel comfortable with seeing the zone from that view/perspective. |
Hmmm,
Since I am a five yet vet of the stance:
I had the same problem. I have written about the issue extensively. I find a way to get my feet clsoer together as soon as I can . . . The bottom line: I NEVER get as far down the first base line on a ground ball to the infield as I did when working "heal-to-toe" . . . I am leaving the "Davis System" at the start of 2007. I am going back to basics. Regards, |
Thanks for the responses. I'll give them a go.
T, were your writings on this side or the other side? Thanks. |
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Tim, Why are you going back to basics ? Doug |
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The view from GD on an uncaught thrid strike is no different than other stances. Each has it's own advantages & disadvantages - go with what works best for you. I prefer GD because I call better game. If that means POSSIBLY having an issue on an uncaught 3rd strike so be it. Not paying attention & poor mechanics caused the Eddings issue. |
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In 20 plus years of umpiring, I have seen a few norms come and go. One that I will be glad to see go is the GD stance! There are other great solutions to "staying stable" that don't require you to be 3' behind the catcher!!!
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Well,
The "challenge" in people working the "Gerry Davis Stance System" is that few have real training.
We often see a ba$tardization of the stance and someone comments: "I work the GD." They don't. I see problems with working the stance when you are not a "top dog" (make that an MLB umpire) in that it is so far different than other stances it gives the "cheap seats" much fodder to use on you. Being 3' or 4' back of the catcher is really not the problem. All of us that have used the stance for a number of years and have been trained know what we gain. I am sure there were MLB umpirs that didn't want to give up the raft (hell, Durwood Merrill, a 'box' guy, gave Dale Scott crap about Dale working the slot -- "hey Dale, how can you see the outside corner from WAAAAAY over there?") Times change and so do systems . . . I am going back to basics mostly to eliminate the problem I have of getting out from behind the plate after a ball is hit AND to help eliminate perceptions that may hold my career back. Regards, |
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BBS's are for voicing opinions. Get over it. |
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But I don't think your second reason for not using GD is faulty. I don't care what perceptions I may have that may hold my career as an umpire back. I'm not in it for ME. I'm in it for the players. I want to make the best calls I can and put myself in the best position to make those calls. If GD looks lazy, but it helped me call a better game, I'd do it in a heartbeat. And the head hanchos wouldn probably not move me up, but so be it. I can live knowing I did what was best for the games I umpired. If I'm off base or misread your comments Tim C, I apologize. No hard feelings :) |
And,
No offense taken . . .
As I have stated several times over the years on many umpire internet sites: I am in umpiring for the power and the money. "For the kids" doesn't move my meter . . . As Toby Keith says: "Let's talk about me, I, me, me, me . . ." |
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We talk about your work how your boss is a jerk We talk about your church and your head when it hurts We talk about the troubles you've been having with your brother About your daddy and your mother and your crazy ex-lover We talk about your friends and the places that you've been We talk about your skin and the dimples on your chin The polish on your toes and the run in your hose And God knows we're gonna talk about your clothes You know talking about you makes me smile But every once in awhile I wanna talk about Tee Wanna talk about I Wanna talk about number one Oh my me my What I think, what I like, what I know, what I want, what I see I like talking about you you you you, usually, but occassionally I wanna talk about Tee I wanna talk about Tee We talk about your dreams and we talk about your schemes Your high school team and your moisturizer creme We talk about your nanna up in Muncie, Indiana We talk about your grandma down in Alabama We talk about your guys of every shape and size The ones that you despise and the ones you idolize We talk about your heart, about your brains and your smarts And your medical charts and when you start You know talking about you makes me grin But every now and then I wanna talk about Tee Wanna talk about I Wanna talk about number one Oh my me my What I think, what I like, what I know, what I want, what I see I like talking about you you you you, usually, but occassionally I wanna talk about Tee I wanna talk about Tee You you you you you you you you youyouyouyouyou I wanna talk about Tee I wanna talk about Tee Wanna talk about I Wanna talk about number one Oh my me my What I think, what I like, what I know, what I want, what I see I like talking about you you you you, usually, but occassionally I wanna talk about Tee I wanna talk about Tee :D |
ha HA! SDS, that's one of the funniest things you have ever posted :D
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With all the umpires around here, Tim, who have gone to the GD system, I'm surprised it's holding you back over there. I see many, many of my fellow NCAA umps using the GD system, and that includes my D-I through D-III peers.
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With apologies to Toby Keith - and SDS and Tee
We talk about your dreams and your self-advancement schemes,
Your cheesy high school teams and your SPF creams, We talk rodent life forms, with ethics clearly de-formed, About sitches that are abnorm, and weather that is too warm. We talk blues in every guise, and every shape and size The partners you despise and that one you bludgeoned and chained and threw into - er, uh, . . . We talk 'bout quitting GD, and your latest CP, And your useless TDs, with tertiary VD . . . You know talking about you makes me grin But every now and then I wanna talk about Tee Wanna talk about He Wanna talk about Number One Oh my oh me What Tee thinks, what Tee likes, what Tee sees, and He sees, and He seeeeeeees . . . I like talking about you you you you, usually, but occassionally I wanna talk about Tee (Tee . . . Tee . . . Tee) I wanna talk about Tee-ee-eeeeee |
Wow, I humbley tip my hat!
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