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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 01:15pm
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When to signal, or not to...

Something I've been wondering about...

Sometimes I will work with a partner that does not signal when there is a play on the runner. This seems to happen most on casual pick off attempts where everyone in the park knows the runner made it back. If you are BU, should you...

a) Signal everytime, even if no tag attempt was made?
b) Signal only when the 1B tries to put a tag on
c) Never signal

I do B, but some of the people I work with will do A or C.

This also seems to happen on stand up doubles where F6 or F4 will casually place a tag on the runner while trotting the ball back to the pitcher. Is a casual safe signal here acceptable?

Thanks.
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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 01:53pm
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I mostly use B. If there is no tag I do not see a reason to give a signal.

Also if a player is standing on the base and there clearly is not an issue with safe and out, I likely will not signal there either.

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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 02:54pm
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Same thing. On pickoff attempts, I give no signal unless it is a really close play. Then I either sell it "Safe!," or bang the runner "Out!" if he got him. If it is fairly close, I may give a non-verbal casual safe signal.
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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 03:11pm
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I'm not as experienced as either of you, but forgive my rhetorical question.

Do you not point on obvious strike calls?

Shouldn't you be calling, or at least signaling, everything? Point me in the right direction here.
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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 03:30pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TussAgee11
I'm not as experienced as either of you, but forgive my rhetorical question.

Do you not point on obvious strike calls?

Shouldn't you be calling, or at least signaling, everything? Point me in the right direction here.
Do you signal a fair ball that is hit to center field?

A pitch is much different than a ball thrown to a base and nothing has happen. Everyone might not know what the pitch is. If there is no tag, why is it necessary when a tag may or may not make a runner out?

You are trying to compare apples and oranges.

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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 03:35pm
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Pointing or hammering a swinging strike is for the benefit of someone who might have looked down or away when the pitch came. This keeps these folks from asking "hey, what was that pitch" when they weren't paying attention. It also makes it easy for the official scorer, who is busy writing and may not be able to tell if it was a swing or not.

Compare it to a Ball call. If the pitch goes way over the catcher's glove all the way to the backstop, do you really need to holler "Ball!" at the top of your lungs? Of course not. In fact, you don't even need to say "Ball" at all, because by definition it is a pitch which is not called a strike. You need to acknowledge "Strike" calls, but you don't need to say "Ball" if you don't want to (though most umpires do). The same goes for obvious "Safe" calls. No signal needed, except on close plays. A physical "Out" signal should be made on all outs recorded at any base, close or not. If it isn't close, and the runner is safe by a large margin, no "Safe" signal is necessary, since if the runner is not out, the only other choice is safe, and it is obvious to all that he's safe.

Now, you should be more confused than ever!
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Last edited by SanDiegoSteve; Sun Aug 27, 2006 at 03:42pm.
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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 03:52pm
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Mr. Agee, whether you give a hand signal or not when the situation is obvious is entirely up to you. What is more important in my judgment is how you give all your signals. I hope you will eschew the
'selling' and 'banging' histrionics which has become so popular among umpires today. Your decisions can (should) always be conveyed by a casual gesture. It is not for an umpire to add emotion to the play. Consider , if you will, what is being expressed when a PU does his merry dance on a called third strike. 'Punching out', so to speak. The act is an emotional outburst in praise of the pitcher' achievment. Why then should not the same __or a similar_dance occur on a called Ball Four which would acclaim the batter's great eye? Obtain a film of Chris Pelekoudas doing a National League game in the '60s. His casual and slow signals constituted an art form that is sadly missed today. McClelland and Froemming are as close to him as you can find among the current staff.
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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 04:10pm
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God, you really are OLD.

Tuss, try to remember that we use 21st century mechanics, not mid-20th. Nobody is advocating doing a "merry dance." I don't even know what that means. Perhaps what Leslie Nielsen did in Naked Gun, or something similar. but punching out a batter on strike 3 called is very standard accepted mechanics at any level, as is selling a close play. You never want to look casual on a close play. It looks very lazy, and apathetic, as do McClelland and Froemming on many bangers. Bangers are called bangers for a good reason, and calling them with strong emphasis is not an "emotional outburst," but rather a strong indication that you are very sure of your call.
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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 05:03pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Old Time Ump
Mr. Agee, whether you give a hand signal or not when the situation is obvious is entirely up to you. What is more important in my judgment is how you give all your signals. I hope you will eschew the
'selling' and 'banging' histrionics which has become so popular among umpires today. Your decisions can (should) always be conveyed by a casual gesture. It is not for an umpire to add emotion to the play. Consider , if you will, what is being expressed when a PU does his merry dance on a called third strike. 'Punching out', so to speak. The act is an emotional outburst in praise of the pitcher' achievment. Why then should not the same __or a similar_dance occur on a called Ball Four which would acclaim the batter's great eye? Obtain a film of Chris Pelekoudas doing a National League game in the '60s. His casual and slow signals constituted an art form that is sadly missed today. McClelland and Froemming are as close to him as you can find among the current staff.
I don't do "a merry dance" to convey how good the players have just done. I do it so the coaches don't question every freakin close play I call. Although a casual out mechanic conveys the same meaning as a good, stiff, [U]controlled[U] bang out, the latter is used to convey confidence that we are 110% correct in our judgement. I can't believe we're talking about this!

Tuss, please, sell your close calls (either on the bases or behind the dish). I'm sure you already do, but don't let Old Timer get you thinking otherwise.

And Old Timer, please... I won't even go there....
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Old Sun Aug 27, 2006, 05:06pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Old Time Ump
Mr. Agee, whether you give a hand signal or not when the situation is obvious is entirely up to you. What is more important in my judgment is how you give all your signals. I hope you will eschew the
'selling' and 'banging' histrionics which has become so popular among umpires today. Your decisions can (should) always be conveyed by a casual gesture. It is not for an umpire to add emotion to the play. Consider , if you will, what is being expressed when a PU does his merry dance on a called third strike. 'Punching out', so to speak. The act is an emotional outburst in praise of the pitcher' achievment. Why then should not the same __or a similar_dance occur on a called Ball Four which would acclaim the batter's great eye? Obtain a film of Chris Pelekoudas doing a National League game in the '60s. His casual and slow signals constituted an art form that is sadly missed today. McClelland and Froemming are as close to him as you can find among the current staff.
I can't help it... this has gotta be one of the most ridiculous posts I've ever seen!


Edited because I can't spell for beans!

Last edited by ctblu40; Sun Aug 27, 2006 at 07:38pm.
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Old Wed Aug 30, 2006, 03:45am
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b) Signal ONLY and ALWAYS when the Baseman tries to put a tag on. No matter how serious or lackadaisical the attempt was.
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