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It's Why We Call Them Rats......
During the first inning of the Ohio ~vs~ Georgia game tonight an Ohio batter fouls a ball off of his leg. After attending to his player who looked to be overreacting, the coach is heard on his mic coaching the kid on being sure to not let a fastball get by him when he gets back in the box. Umpire says it's time to get the game moving, to which coach rat responds rather rudely:
"Hey, he's hurt. I'm just checking on him!" Tim. |
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" . . . who looked to be overreacting . . . " Is that one of those famous judgement calls? It takes two seconds on my wristwatch to say "Don't let a fastball get by you." Get pushy (the coach's opinion - a judgement call on his end), get a "rude" response.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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I've come to expect no less from you, Rich. To a rat the game management tool of keeping the game moving along is getting pushy. Unless, of course, it's his team waiting on the field for the opposing coach to get his player back in the box. Tim. |
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There are two sides to every story Tim. No one has a lock on which side is correct. I don't care how long the opposing coach takes to get his player back in the box - it gives my pitcher a breather.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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The Rat claimed to be checking his hurt kid when, in fact, he was coaching him on his at bat. You seem to either overlook that behavior, or lying has become so common in coaching that it doesn't bother you.
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GB |
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But if you do an injury visit on your pitcher, now I have a rule to et you moving along if you start coaching!
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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With the batter sitch mentioned - if I hear the "coaching" I'm moving you along, and if I get the "I'm checking on my player, he's hurt" comment I'm going to ask "What does not letting a fastball get by him have to do with his injury?" I see no issue with a comment as you walk away -after all it only takes two seconds - but during the injury time out, we need to be tending to the injury. We could tell players to "get hurt" so we can come talk to them. Hey that works, fake an injury, I'll come tell PU that I'm tending to your injury and I can tell you to drag bunt down the 3BL, F5 is playing very deep. We could have a sign for that - hat = steal, chin = bunt, belt to cheek = get hurt. I went off the deep end, but we have to draw a line somewhere or else it will get to that. Discussion leads away from the injury looks like a good line to me. |
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How about the rat for Maryland that kept on questioning the strike zone by asking his catcher, "where are those pitches missing? In? Out?," and then the kid shrugging his shoulders as if to say, "search me, coach. The umpire just missed them."
The real problem was that Arizona was pounding everything that was in the strike zone, so the umpire didn't have a chance to call many strikes. The rest of the pitches were off the plate, and Minnesota's manager just kept blaming the umpire 'cause his little rugrat couldn't hit the corners.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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GB |
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Where's the lie Garth, did you miss this part? an Ohio batter fouls a ball off of his leg. Or did the kid foul the ball off his leg on purpose because he wanted the coach to come coach him? Fouling a ball off your leg hurts. Hell, Jermaine Dye had his leg broken by such a hit. Maybe you think a 12-year old kid should "act like a man"? CRAP - he's 12. Yet somehow, after attending to the kid, saying "Don't let the fastball by you" as you prepare to return to the dugout makes you a lying rat. You're wrong. Tim's wrong.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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watched this game--in bw catnaps
just like a rat to sneak in some 'coaching' during a injurty check--and then get snippy on TV when hes' called on it. your ratness has skewered your fairness sense mr Ives!
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It's sad when you're at a baseball game and realize that you'll never have the money, status or talent that the guys on the field take for granted. And it gets even worse when the grounds crew gives way to the players. |
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I didn't see the play, but from the OP, the coach finished tending to the injury and continued to hang around as though he were tending to the injury while offering hitting advice to his player. I believe Garth is correctly suggesting that the lie occurred when the coach moved from medic to coach, but suggested he was still a medic by saying, "Hey, he's hurt. I'm just checking on him!" The coach's statement wasn't true: He wasn't just checking on him, he was also coaching him. No one has suggested the foul ball on the leg didn't hurt. What has been suggested is that coaches who are tending to medical issues shouldn't offer game strategy/advice regardles of how much time it takes to do so. If a coach does that he has moved from an injury time out to an offensive or defensive time out. I don't see any difference between the batter's injury and a pitcher's injury in this regard.
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CraigD Israel |
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Just wanted to interject here that Little League rules limit the offense to one time-out per inning. So the fact that this coach was using an injury time-out as an opportunity to coach his player without taking a charged time-out gave him an unfair advantage not intended by the rules.
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Jim Porter |
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