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I don't use any mechanisms like the ones that have been mentionned. Although I will periodically remind myself to be patient and not make up my mind before the ball crosses the plate and into the glove.
For me, there are two common situations that could be problematic. They are basically the same pitches that fool the hitters. One is the high fastball that looks good coming in. Batters often swing at that pitch because it looks like a strike. if the batters are sometimes fooled, we can be as well. If you're patient, you will not miss it. Secondly is the sinker that again that looks good all the way until it dips below the strike zone at the last instant. It often fools the batter and we need to let it be caught before we decide. I think it was Peter Osbourne who wrote about gross misses (calls that everyone in the ballpark knows you missed). Good timing help avoid gross misses. |
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Well,
" . . . then it rises out of the zone and unless we watch it all the way to the mitt we may be fooled as well."
Well at a bare minimum someone has a sense of humor this morning. Regards, |
It's not so much that the ball rises as much as it is that the F2, batter and umpire actually drop as the pitch is arriving at the plate. It is a well known fact as many fields dip for drainage.
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No pitch is either a ball or a strike until after it reaches the catcher's mitt. A bias or predisposition toward a certain outcome might lead to quicker games. It certainly leads to an improper zone if you want to advance in adult baseball (college-aged and older). Bible's advice might be OK for established umpires, although I find that partners who follow it tend to have strike zones that are unfairly large. Beginners who follow that advice are practically guaranteed that result, and they make enough mistakes in that direction as it is. I don't know who said it, but I think it's sometimes attributed to Doug Harvey: "The batter's got a right to make a living, too." |
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F1 releases ball @ 1' minimum over his head. F1 is 5' tall (OK he's a mijit) :D Ball arrives @ the plate at 6' elevation (OK it's Wilt The Stilt) :eek: 1.5' + 1+ +5' = 7.5' 7.5'-6' = no rise. |
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i work with a umpire whose creedo is, get em to 2 strikes as soon as you can (assuming the batter doesnt hit it first!). he calls a b i g zone to get the batter to 2strikes as fast as he can then he calls a REAL strikezone if you get what im sayin. he says this sppeeds the game and gets batterss swinging.
is this a good idea? im not realy comfertable with it. (Whew see no big caps this time!) :) |
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So he purposefully changes the strike zone not only during the game, but during the same at bat. And you're asking if this is a good idea? Wow. |
well i dont do that but its not MY place to tel him hes wrong
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.....yes it is! |
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hes a bigdog as you guys say often so nope i let him defend it with the rats. he knows what hes doing and why (even tho its a bad idea imo), so he can face the music |
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