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This is the most telling quote in this whole thread.... JJ |
Amazing how chance works. Last night ball gets away from F2 but only slightly, R2 goes for 3B, ball beats him by a half yard, F5 puts the glove down, R2 slides in and I bang him out. Not a peep from anyone, including HC standing in the 3b box.
As I walk away I am thinking F5 may not have gotten the glove on him. Maybe I am thinking this because of this thread, don't know, but I do know there was not a peep from anyone. |
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The ball came out, and my timing was impeccable, so the call was easy. :) |
A trollin we will go, a trollin we will go, hi, ho, the merry oh, a trollin we will go!!
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He's out all day and everyday in my games also. Been that way for about 15 years now and amazing I never get any grief about these calls. When I used to (my first 15 years) make these type of calls, it always ended up in an ejection or big argument. Make the expected call and move on with the game. If Jeter wants to complain, then the next time he makes a similiar play, I call the runner safe. If he complains, I would just remind him, "remember the other day in ..." He would get over it pretty quick then I am for certain. Pro players want that call because it keeps them away from injury. The longer they have to stay in the play, the more chance of a freak injury, jamming the wrist, a cleat etc., Thanks David |
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I didn't see the OP, so I can't comment on what happened there. Maybe it was just missed. Maybe the umpire didn't expect the type of slide ("surprise is the umpire's worst enemy"), so he had poor timing. Maybe he mis-spoke (or was mis-heard). For me, I'll look only as closely as I have to. If the ball is there, and the tag is down, it's up to the runner to convince me that the tag was missed by doing something other than sliding straight in and making me see the missed tag. Some runners have done that. Some have not. |
Same crew last night Dodgers-Mets. Manny is out on a called strike three that's 4-5 inches outside by john Hirshbeck. Manny flips his equipment and gets tossed by Hirshbeck. Get the feeling that Marty Foster was thinking to himself "you could call that pitch a strike years ago but the game has changed". The shoe was on the other foot tonight.
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GREAT point!
The pitch was a great pitcher's pitch, which several years back, hitters knew they had to swing at or walk away. Now, it's usually a ball because of the strike zone technology that's employed on almost every telecast, and the resultant scrutiny of the umpiring on gray area strikes. So now, when that pitch is called, hitters go off. Manny's zone knowledge and discipline are almost as good as there is, but if he takes a chance by looking at a pitch like that, he needs to shut the eff up and walk away. Todd Helton fouls that off. |
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Don't get me wrong - Foster wasn't too bright with his comment to Jeter (although Jeter didn't have to turn it into the media circus it became) -- but Hirschbeck didn't have to say what he did, either. I'd never say something like this about an umpire on my crew and I'm just a pissant amateur umpire. |
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The problem was in the response.
Speaking of which, this summer I have not been able to umpire as much because I been coaching some select baseball. I am all for these young kids getting the opportunity but when I go out there and argue a call they give me a look like I am crazy, then to top it off they give me a warning. Now I am sympathetic to umpires, I really am but when they give me a response that makes me question there ability, thats when I blow my top off. Anyways sorry for derailing the thread, thought I would vent just a bit. |
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You go, Earl Weaver. :rolleyes: |
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