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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sat May 30, 2009, 08:11am
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Originally Posted by Rich Ives View Post

Did you show him the rule after the game?
No coach should ever do this or any parent. Only fellow umpires that this umpire KNOWS is an umpire. Otherwise, go to the UIC and let him know so he can explain the rule to the umpire if the umpire is willing to listen to anyone.

Do not approach the umpire with a rule book b/c nothing good may come of it.
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Old Sat May 30, 2009, 08:47am
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Originally Posted by GA Umpire View Post
No coach should ever do this or any parent. Only fellow umpires that this umpire KNOWS is an umpire. Otherwise, go to the UIC and let him know so he can explain the rule to the umpire if the umpire is willing to listen to anyone.

Do not approach the umpire with a rule book b/c nothing good may come of it.
Why not? I can see not doing that during the game, of course, but what is wrong with approaching someone who kicked the living sh*t out of a rule in the game in a nice manner to enlighten them of the rules after the game? Of course you wouldn't do it beligerently and you have to use a bit of tact, but you shouldn't leave that umpire ignorant of a rule so he can go out and ruin the next game he works.

I hear people talk of the "UIC," which sounds like a LL term of which I am pretty unfamiliar. Out here we work in associations, and have no "UIC" to go run and tell. If you don't straighten the umpire out right there on the spot, he is liable to never know that he has misapplied a rule.
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Old Sat May 30, 2009, 11:31am
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Originally Posted by SanDiegoSteve View Post
Why not? I can see not doing that during the game, of course, but what is wrong with approaching someone who kicked the living sh*t out of a rule in the game in a nice manner to enlighten them of the rules after the game? Of course you wouldn't do it beligerently and you have to use a bit of tact, but you shouldn't leave that umpire ignorant of a rule so he can go out and ruin the next game he works.

I hear people talk of the "UIC," which sounds like a LL term of which I am pretty unfamiliar. Out here we work in associations, and have no "UIC" to go run and tell. If you don't straighten the umpire out right there on the spot, he is liable to never know that he has misapplied a rule.
Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmm. I don't know. Maybe this is why. How should I have handled this I think this conversation has been gone through before and nothing good came from it as you can see.

UIC, assignor, or whatever you want to call them. They are the ones to inform so they can inform their umpires. Do not approach an umpire with a rule book in hand even if the game is over. Nothing good may come of it. And, instead of testing to see if this may be the exception, handle it the same way every time and nothing like what happened in the other thread will happen.

Leave to the umpire's assignor(or whoever is in charge) to inform them. Not just some Joe Blow off the street who the umpire has no clue about. B/c that person may not have any clue of what they are talking about. And, like it or not, even if the game is over, approaching the umpire with a rule book is trying to show him up. Only difference now is he can't kick your a$$ out of the game and send you home packing. That is just cowardice at best. Leave it to a Rat(and this applies to anyone trying this same tactic whether it is a parent/player/coach/umpire) to do that.
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Last edited by GA Umpire; Sat May 30, 2009 at 11:34am.
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Old Sat May 30, 2009, 06:07pm
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Originally Posted by GA Umpire View Post
Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmm. I don't know. Maybe this is why. How should I have handled this I think this conversation has been gone through before and nothing good came from it as you can see.

UIC, assignor, or whatever you want to call them. They are the ones to inform so they can inform their umpires. Do not approach an umpire with a rule book in hand even if the game is over. Nothing good may come of it. And, instead of testing to see if this may be the exception, handle it the same way every time and nothing like what happened in the other thread will happen.

Leave to the umpire's assignor(or whoever is in charge) to inform them. Not just some Joe Blow off the street who the umpire has no clue about. B/c that person may not have any clue of what they are talking about. And, like it or not, even if the game is over, approaching the umpire with a rule book is trying to show him up. Only difference now is he can't kick your a$$ out of the game and send you home packing. That is just cowardice at best. Leave it to a Rat(and this applies to anyone trying this same tactic whether it is a parent/player/coach/umpire) to do that.
Well, first off, I'm no Joe Blow off the street, I am a well-known and long-time respected umpire, and when I give advice to rooks who don't know hay from horse manure, they usually thank me for setting them straight. I don't know as much about umpiring as my assignor, since he has about 60 years of umpiring experience to my 20+, but I'll wager I know at least as much as the majority of assignors out there. I wasn't talking about some yokel off the street, I was talking about a brother umpire clueing in a misguided arbiter.

Secondly, if a coach approaches in a manner that is not confrontational, he could perhaps suggest that the umpire missed a rule, then ask the umpire to pull out his rule book just to double check. I would welcome such a challenge from a coach. I've never had one that knew a rule and I didn't. Lucky I guess.
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Last edited by SanDiegoSteve; Sat May 30, 2009 at 06:17pm.
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 01:32pm
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Originally Posted by SanDiegoSteve View Post
Well, first off, I'm no Joe Blow off the street, I am a well-known and long-time respected umpire, and when I give advice to rooks who don't know hay from horse manure, they usually thank me for setting them straight. I don't know as much about umpiring as my assignor, since he has about 60 years of umpiring experience to my 20+, but I'll wager I know at least as much as the majority of assignors out there. I wasn't talking about some yokel off the street, I was talking about a brother umpire clueing in a misguided arbiter.

Secondly, if a coach approaches in a manner that is not confrontational, he could perhaps suggest that the umpire missed a rule, then ask the umpire to pull out his rule book just to double check. I would welcome such a challenge from a coach. I've never had one that knew a rule and I didn't. Lucky I guess.
To me, you are some Joe Blow. And, as I said, if the umpire doesn't know you are an umpire, then leave them alone. The last thing any umpire wants to hear is "I have been umpiring X years" b/c Rats will try anything.

Second, Rats will try not to be confrontational until they don't get their way. All do it, even the pros. So, none of this means a thing. Just look at how the one acted in the other thread. He started nice until he didn't get his way.

It's funny how so many will jump on a Rat they don't know is an umpire. But, let one of the supposed umpires pull the same thing as a Rat, and so many on this forum will agree. That is amazing to me. I wonder if those like that are that inconsistent on the field. Possibly. Hmmm. Flip flop on this forum, I wonder if they flip flop on the field with their calls. Hmmmm.
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 03:04pm
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Originally Posted by SanDiegoSteve View Post
Well, first off, I'm no Joe Blow off the street, I am a well-known and long-time respected umpire,
If you look closely at the bolded type, you will see that I told you I was well-known. This means that the other umpires in my association know who I am. When we attend meetings (sometimes weekly, but normally bi-weekly), everybody gets to know everyone else. I wouldn't go up to someone I had never met and start telling them anything, but on the other hand, I don't have a problem with someone coming to me after a game in a respectful manner. It's all in how you approach someone.
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 03:46pm
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Originally Posted by SanDiegoSteve View Post
If you look closely at the bolded type, you will see that I told you I was well-known. This means that the other umpires in my association know who I am. When we attend meetings (sometimes weekly, but normally bi-weekly), everybody gets to know everyone else. I wouldn't go up to someone I had never met and start telling them anything, but on the other hand, I don't have a problem with someone coming to me after a game in a respectful manner. It's all in how you approach someone.
Forget it. You missed the point of the other posts and how the other thread went from non-confrontational to confrontational in no time. Forget it. The points are lost on you.
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 06:00pm
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They are not lost on me, trust me. I just have a very different opinion than yours. Or am I supposed to just nod my head and agree with everything you say?
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 08:47pm
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Originally Posted by SanDiegoSteve View Post
I wouldn't go up to someone I had never met and start telling them anything, but on the other hand, I don't have a problem with someone coming to me after a game in a respectful manner. It's all in how you approach someone.
I also believe I had just got done telling you this, which said that I wouldn't go to someone I didn't know, but that I didn't have a problem with someone approaching me (fan, coach, parent, etc.) in a respectful manner. So, I agree that an umpire should not approach an umpire that he does not know.
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Old Sat May 30, 2009, 07:00pm
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Originally Posted by GA Umpire View Post
Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmm. I don't know. Maybe this is why. How should I have handled this I think this conversation has been gone through before and nothing good came from it as you can see.
I see you have experience with this type of circus. Each side spouting off particular events as they see fit. Each side making up a version of reality to support their desired position. Neither side listening to the other.

Best to let it go on or to avoid it at all costs? I hear what your saying.
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 01:38pm
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Originally Posted by SAump View Post
I see you have experience with this type of circus. Each side spouting off particular events as they see fit. Each side making up a version of reality to support their desired position. Neither side listening to the other.

Best to let it go on or to avoid it at all costs? I hear what your saying.
From experience, No. But, from others and as you can how the one in the other thread was, then you can see why it should not be done.

But, if you want to allow it, then go ahead. But, when it blows up in your face and causes a bigger problem than just stopping it in the beginning, then oh well.

My suggestion is for those who are not known to be an umpire to that umpire, should not try to bother the umpire after the game is over. The game is over so let it go. If they want results, go to the umpire's assignor(or whatever the person is called in your area), and let them deal with it. It will be less confrontational and probably get better results. Not let it go on but do it in a more professional, courteous manner(and this applies to umpires especially). Better results come from that approach. A Rat trying to do it in the heat of the moment may not get any results expected.
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 02:18pm
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Originally Posted by GA Umpire View Post
If they want results, go to the umpire's assignor(or whatever the person is called in your area), and let them deal with it. It will be less confrontational and probably get better results. Not let it go on but do it in a more professional, courteous manner(and this applies to umpires especially).
And this differs from what I said how? Didn't I say to approach the umpire in a professional manner? What if I am the assignor? I have worked closely with my assignor and have assigned games with my assignor on a bi-weekly basis for many years. Does this qualify me? I have been asked for my input as to what level I thought a certain umpire should be working. Is this close enough? I have been assigned to evaluate umpires BY my assignor. He has asked me to go see how so-and-so works, and I've also been assigned with certain umpires to evaluate them as well. And if one of those umpires gets a rule wrong, and I catch the error, I am going to say something about it so it doesn't happen again.
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Old Sun May 31, 2009, 02:30pm
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Originally Posted by SanDiegoSteve View Post
And this differs from what I said how? Didn't I say to approach the umpire in a professional manner? What if I am the assignor? I have worked closely with my assignor and have assigned games with my assignor on a bi-weekly basis for many years. Does this qualify me? I have been asked for my input as to what level I thought a certain umpire should be working. Is this close enough? I have been assigned to evaluate umpires BY my assignor. He has asked me to go see how so-and-so works, and I've also been assigned with certain umpires to evaluate them as well. And if one of those umpires gets a rule wrong, and I catch the error, I am going to say something about it so it doesn't happen again.
You're missing the point. The point you keep bringing up is the umpires KNOW you. If you approached me, I do NOT KNOW you. That is the difference.

If you approach me, I don't know you are an umpire until I have called on the field with you or I see you on the field umpiring. That is the difference between Rat Joe Blow coming to the umpire or his fellow umpire or assignor which the umpire KNOWS. See the difference?

A Rat(which applies to anyone approaching the umpire which he doesn't know is an umpire/assignor) should not be trying to do anything before/during/after the game. Get outside of your little area and think of the bigger picture. If the umpire does NOT KNOW you, then you shouldn't be approaching them after the game. Tell the one who he does know and let them approach him. Or, suffer the same treatment as the "supposed" umpire in the other thread. Those umpires didn't know he umpires and treated him as such. That is the risk a Rat takes.

Do it courteously and professionally by informing the umpire if he KNOWS you're an umpire or if he does NOT KNOW you're an umpire, let his assignor take care of it after they have been informed.
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Old Sat May 30, 2009, 11:42am
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When I was coaching I showed an umpire the rule only once. We were playing a team whose coach was not one of my favorites and his son was pitching. My son broke up a no-hitter in the 5th, but was called out for not reporting, after the other coach complained. I discussed what I thought teh correct rulling should be with the PU and he said "show me". I guess he did not think I had a rule book. After I showed he reversed the out and allowed the hit. The other coach said he would protest. I told him good, go ahead. It cost $50 to lodge a protest in the league and if not upheld the $50 went to the league. I would not have shown the rule book if he had not asked me to.
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Old Sat May 30, 2009, 11:51am
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When I was coaching I showed an umpire the rule only once. We were playing a team whose coach was not one of my favorites and his son was pitching. My son broke up a no-hitter in the 5th, but was called out for not reporting, after the other coach complained. I discussed what I thought teh correct rulling should be with the PU and he said "show me". I guess he did not think I had a rule book. After I showed he reversed the out and allowed the hit. The other coach said he would protest. I told him good, go ahead. It cost $50 to lodge a protest in the league and if not upheld the $50 went to the league. I would not have shown the rule book if he had not asked me to.
He asked to be shown b/c he didn't know the rule and, apparently, knew he didn't know the rule. If the umpire admits to not knowing it or, in your case, thinks he is being a smarta$$, then that is on him. But, if the umpire does not ask for it, then no one should be offering it before, during, or after the game.
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