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Foul Ball Called in Error
Hi - my first post here. Looking some advice on how we could have handled this one better. I am the base umpire, AAU game using FED rules.
2 outs, R1, 1-1 count on RH batter: pitch is way inside and I see/hear it hit the knob end of the bat, ball rolls towards me in B. PU immediately yells "foul", batter remains in box. Pitcher fields ball, and starts to play to first - I echo foul call. Offense immediately wants to know why foul was called, shouts out "the ball hit the bat". My partner comes out to talk to me. I tell him what I saw. He tells me "I heard it hit something". Is it best to admit the foul ball call was wrong, or tell them the ball hit the bat, then the batter. Or something else. BTW: my partner kept the batter at bat with another strike; 2 pitches later batter grounded out.
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Joe |
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In FED, you have no choice by rule! If the umpire calls the ball FOUL, it is foul no matter what. If you are wrong, you swallow your pride and let the manager chew on you a little, then get on with the game.
In OBR, if the players react to the fall of FOUL, then again, you are stuck with it.
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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Sounds like the PU thought the ball struck the batter after it hit the bat.
You can't unring this bell, and its not your call anyway. As BU you should only call a FOUL ball in the box IF you are absolutely sure you saw it and the PU missed it (screened out). But you must be ABSOLUTELY sure. It doesnt work the other way around. There's nothing to explain here. Its the PUs call, he called foul, play on. |
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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If I know I nailed the call, on the other hand, and the coach wants to argue, I'm going to give him all the argument he wants, and then some.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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I agree with mcrowder, Fess up and go on. If they want to be jerks and question every call, you can put a stop to it. Most often that is the end of an arguement. Also I think it does add to your credibility for the future. I have had to fess up to a mental mistake which was huge, nothing I could do to change it but it was my fault. I took the heat. a couple years later with the same coach he came out to argue something, and the conversation leaned toward was I mistaken, I simply said you know if I was wrong I would tell you I made a mistake, he stopped looked at me then said "yup you're right you would have." then turned and left end of problem.
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3apps "It isn't enough for an umpire merely to know what he's doing. He has to look as though he know what he's doing too." - National League Umpire Larry Goetz "Boys, I'm one of those umpires that misses 'em every once in a while so if it's close, you'd better hit it." |
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As BU, my response to a coach inquiry would be short and sweet: "Once it's called foul, it's foul. No second kiss at the pig."
As PU, I would try to get away with a shrug and a simple "I called it foul coach." If he persists in dragging out a confession, I'd give it to him, certainly instead of lying about the basis for the call. "Yeah, coach I called it prematurely, sorry about that. Have the same problem in bed. Life's a *****. Now let's play." |
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If it is a close hitting the bat or the the batter there is no way the bu can tell what it hit. And if you do over rule that from a 100 feet away you better circle the wagons because you are in for you hell of a aguement know.
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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But Oz, he wasn't asking whether you have to stick with the FOUL call - he seemed to already know that. Your reply, while being correct information, did not answer his actual question. It merely reiterated something he already seemed to know.
He was asking - when you're stuck with a FOUL call that you made but you know was wrong, should you fess up to the mistake or invent an excuse ("or tell them the ball hit the bat, then the batter."). You say: Quote:
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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Coach, its a foul ball because the PU called a foul. By rule, (since this is FED), if an umpire calls it foul its foul whether right or wrong ... So, coach let's play ball. Thanks Daivd |
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