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reviving this thread just as a nice piece of easy reading...anybody had a coach come out and question this one, this season?
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I umpire and I coach.
As a coach, I had what should be a knowledgeable PONY umpire call a foul when a pitch hit my player on the back of the hand as he tried to lean away. Umpire Tom: "Foul ball! Batter, back in the box." Me (quietly and patiently): "Tom, the ball hit him, not the bat." Tom: "Kevin, it hit his hand; the hands are part of the bat." Me: [shakes head no] Tom: "You're an umpire; I'm surprised you don't know that." Me: [raised eyebrows, incredulous grin] (Arguing in public with a guy like that in front of others is a sign of stupidity) |
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Where did this come from?
I was trying to think where a myth like this would originate? Who thought this one up? All I could come up with is it makes the call easier for the lazy umpire. You don't have to determine if the ball hit the hands or the bat because it's all the same call. Somewhere on a sandlot field someone proabably made it up to make the call easier...it's always a foul ball and requires no determination if the ball hit the bat or the hands.
TwoBits - I think posting the 40 myths at the little league ballpark is a great idea! Hopefully people will share their wealth of new knowledge!! |
A parent at a recent game after I call a guy out on a banger: "Come on, Blue, tie goes to the runner!"
Sideline conversation with coach during a substitution: "You know, Casey [his actual name], your parents combine more words with less knowledge than any group of parents in the greater Los Angeles area." Reaction: couldn't stop laughing long enough to respond. Every time I looked at him the rest of the day and after the game, he started chuckling. |
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I do not know the origin of this myth, but perhaps its from: Quote:
JM |
I think you can count on the rules myths coming up in any youth game. That's where the myths thrive until they can bubble to the surface and get shot down by a good umpire.
I called an 11-12 yo game last month. The coach wanted a strike because the batter did not pull the bat back on a bunt attempt. Same coach in another game claimed he could change the batting order if the batters had not come up yet. I make it a point to quietly tell the coach the proper rule. If he becomes a rat, I'm not so quite. |
Tell the ump " Look blue... go to Dick's Sporting Goods, walk to the team sports section and look at the bats that are on the rack. Are there any hands attached to bat handle?" Then throw in a " I heard Lenscrafters is having a 2 for 1 sale this weekend..so you and your partner can save some money" Yah.... umpires love to hear that!
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Another recent encounter: Coach: "I played pro ball for 12 years for four different organizations, and I have never seen that call." Me: "That's great. How much experience do you have with high school?" |
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This is probably one of the stupidest things I have ever heard of - making a coach pull a rule book out on an umpire! |
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Two bits ~ an example I like to use for coaches and umpires alike: If the hands are part of the bat, and only the offense can use a bat......Coach, when your team is on defense, they have to leave their hands in the dugout.
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Whenever I hear "tie goes to the runner" I answer with "I guess that's where the expression 'tieing out a base hit' comes from."
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I tip my hat to you. We gotta work a game together soon, and I'll buy the post game refreshments. |
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