![]() |
Three Generations of Umps
Three Kincade generations umpire first game together | recordonline.com
almost beats the Wendlestadts working a game or two together... Ive known 'grandpa' a few years, and he has a lot of cool stories about working spring training games. Anybody else know of something like this? |
Wow!
That is a cool story. |
Great story!
Great read!
I just got my son started this year as a 13-year old. He still plays and was only able to call 7 games. He said he enjoyed it! I heard one mom standing next to me (didn't know I was his dad) say he needs glasses at one of his games. I just kind of chuckled and asked him about it after the game. He said he didn't remember hearing that one. Great start! It would be awesome if we had a 3-generation game sometime down the road, too! |
The Runge's
While they never had a chance to work together, it's pretty impressive (at least to me) that 3 generations of Runge made it as ML umpires (Ed, Paul, Brian).
Other impressive officiating families - Crawfords, and several examples of father/son or uncle/nephew (Wendelstedt, DiMuro, Gorman, Carey's in FB [brothers], Welke's, McCauley's (NHL), Devorski's (NHL), probably others although I'm not as familiar with the NBA and NFL rosters. And there are player-related examples - the 3? Alou's in baseball, 6...count 'em, 6 Sutters in hockey who made it to the NHL. Not sure if there's an apples to apples comparison here, though, since there are far many jobs for players in any sport than there are for officials. But impressive nonetheless. Hopefully I didn't take this too far off-topic. Hock9 |
Great brother act from the past: Umpire Bill Haller (the smarter brother), and long time Giants Catcher, Tom Haller.
|
cool story...thanks for posting
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I am personally living one of these now.
My father-in-law was one of the first youth umpires in this area. My wife was an umpire for about 8 years and I have been one for 20. My son took it up over 10 years ago. At one point, before my wife left umpiring, we were able (and did in fact) form a 3 umpire team to do games on several occasions. Now my son and I can continue on with 2 man teams. |
Quote:
|
Lots of stories. Umpiring started after marriage. Married 32 years. Started umpiring just after my wife. Was umpiring and coaching for quite a while when my son started playing.
Gave up coaching about 9-10 years ago. So much for my life story. Do not want to reveal too much. But many good times umpiring. |
Quote:
Although I can't conceive of Jim Wolf giving Randy even one pitch, it's a good thing he doesn't have to work with that spectre of a conflict. |
Haller caught only 59 games that year behind Bill Freehan. Of the six Detroit games his brother worked that year--all at Detroit--Haller caught four of them. Bill Haller worked the bases in the first three of the six, a series in late May. Then, on July 14, Bill worked the plate and Tom caught all nine innings of a 1-0 loss.
Can you believe that? He had to have a nail-biter! http://i57.photobucket.com/albums/g2...kguy/Box-1.jpg |
Quote:
I would think his integrity would suffice in this case as it does in all the games that he calls. |
Quote:
In my association, we are not allowed to work games where one of our children is participating. Several umpires face this dilemma every year. Integrity has little to do with the decision. They just don't want to take the chance, both in MLB and amateur associations alike. Here is what is written at Wikipedia for Jim Wolf's profile: "He is the brother of Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Randy Wolf, which has caused players to accuse him of having a conflict of interest. In September 2003, Florida Marlins catcher Ivan Rodriguez accused him of skewing calls against the Marlins during one late-season series to help the Philadelphia Phillies, his brother's team at the time, beat the Marlins for the wild card. Pitcher Mark Redman also inferred the same but stopped short of fully accusing him. The Marlins won the wild card that year and went on to win the World Series. If Wolf is ever umpiring a game that his brother pitches, he does not call balls and strikes, although MLB generally avoids assigning him to Randy's games." |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:04pm. |