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Set position stop
Question. In College and Fed I know a complete and discernable stop is required. I have also read that in the Pro game, a little leeway is given. Had an Indy pro game last night. Ex MLB pitcher on the mound. I am U3. A few times while in "C" I could have called a balk in the College or Fed game but left it alone as I have watched countless hours of MLB on TV and in person. He stopped. But not very long. Your thoughts on the difference?
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That was my thought. They're not shy.
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Cheers, mb |
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Either way, next time, when you have the opportunity, after a batted ball, call time to 'check the ball' and discretely tell him to come to a 'good stop'. It'll let him know he's close to balking. Last edited by umpjayfire; Fri Jun 19, 2009 at 09:00am. |
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I am not questioning whether or not you should have called it. I am questioning the definition of a "complete and discernible" stop. What determines that?
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Question everything until you get an irrefutable or understandable answer...Don't settle for "That's Just the Way it is" |
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I have also worked games that ex MLB players have played. Sometimes because of thier pro experience they will try and use tactics that are borderline balks and as already stated a little reminder is all that is needed.
"Hey 15, give me a good stop so this 3B coach ain't all over my butt. Appreciate it." Never , ever had any other response than "Sure Blue". Had a left -handed ex minor ball pitcher that had an excellent move to first. However all season long because of the two man system it was difficult to get a full look at how long he was hanging his right foot out there in the move to first, and it was always borderline on final placement. We would have conversations all the time about it and he would always just smile. I was at 1B for the League Championship game and balked him for the move that brought in the go ahead run. His only comment afterwards was "good call." Which is probably another topic here, but I found that the ex-pro pitchers usually gave you a lot more respect out there. |
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K-Rod often doesn't stop with no runners on but ususlly has a pretty long stop with runners on.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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Runners were on base! His stop was very borderline. (more of a change of direction)
http://mlb.mlb.com/media/video.jsp?t...d=bal&c_id=bal Select NYM@Bal Huff's line drive single. (actually one of his better stops, but still borderline IMO) Last edited by JR12; Sat Jun 20, 2009 at 12:47am. |
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Borderline, my a$$. In the "real world" this is clearly a no-stop balk. They simply don't call that in the Major Leagues anymore. |
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I can't get the video to load, but generally, with men on, K-Rod's stop comes before the downward movement of his glove which commits him (which I agree is clearly a change of direction only).
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According to Evan's balk video -- the hands finish moving down before the leg begins moving up. |
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