![]() |
|
|
|
|||
|
So, Garth, the next time you're in B position and see a nice pitch down the middle that the plate umpire calls a ball, you're going to call time and inform everyone that we have a strike instead?
|
|
|||
|
Quote:
From your post, you had determined the runner was safe and declared it. If you had doubt, then ask your partner before you declare safe or out, or get in a better position to know for yourself. That is all everyone is saying here. Your credibility is automatically on the line everytime you make a decision and then question it, by asking for help. The path you choose and the extent you go to, to "get the call rght" is entirely up to you. We are just passing on the experience that has worked best for us. |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Quote:
i would think that by asking for help i would be showing that I am all about getting it right. sheesh. |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Officiate as you see fit and have a good season. |
|
|||
|
From NCAA Appendix E "Getting the Call Right"
No umpire shall criticize or interfere with another umpire's decision unless asked by the one making it. The umpire making the call must be the one to seek asistance of a partner. In the situations below, a partner who is 100 percetn certain he has addiitonal information should approach unsolicited and alert the other umpire to such information (7 items listed, none of which is "pulled foot or swipe tag at first") |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Last edited by Garth Vader; Fri Mar 11, 2011 at 05:33pm. |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|
|||
|
I find it interesting, "Garth", that you signed your OP "Gordon."
Quote:
|
|
|||
|
And with the attitude you're spewing out, there would be fewer and fewer games on your schedule as time goes by, so don't worry - you can remain a coach, now. Or a keyboard umpire. Or a fanboy.
|
|
|||
|
Quote:
A. You stated; "The pitcher from my angle may or may not have tagged the edge of the base facing second ( at this point I would have been looking to my partner for help)". So what changed your mind? You didn't know. The follow on action should never have a bearing on what you saw or didn't see. Would every trapped ball you call be changed to a catch because the fielder holds it up and shows it too you, course not. A batter doesn't swing, does his action "suggest" it wasn't a strike? B. Your partner told you, you missed it. Hindsight say's you should asked. C. It woulda looked sharp as heck, and you've nothing to lose, worst you get is the same call, the best you get is an out. And you'll sleep much better knowing you did everything in your power to GET IT RIGHT. 2. No. Your partner doesn't know why you called em safe, maybe you had a bobble, maybe you thought the runner won the race? You later post your partner should have interjected, again, what if you just flat missed a call, you would expect your partner to stop all action and tell you what he had? On what, every play? Only 95% of em, 50%, where do you draw the line? How about a low strike, should the BU interject. Why not just go with 3 umpire's per base, majority rules? I like your get it right desire, but "you" gotta get em right not the consensus. How could you adjust your coverage on this play to see the whole picture, did ya relax thinking it was gonna be a gimme? Were you hedging towards 2B to much in anticipation of a play there? Good luck and "get em right"..
__________________
SLAS |
|
|||
|
Garth, I appreciate your position, but there are problems
Garth,
No offense intended if you work lots of baseball, but you need to understand something. In higher levels of Baseball there is a concept called "own your own call", or "take care of your business". Players and coaches expect the umpire to make get the call right, and lots of people know who should be calling what. In your case, you are saying you're not sure he got the bag. You did the right thing, you called him safe. F3 gave the play away and the manager was telling him that. I recently was in a ball park for a college game, with a 2 out play at the plate. Ball beats the runner to the plate, F2 made a terrible tag, but in the PU's view tagged him, and the PU rang up the runner. Right call was made. After the play F2 went and tagged the runner again, after the runner touched the plate, and after PU made his call. HC and F2 had a long talk in between innings since he threw the PU under the bus for the second tag, when the umpire clearly called him out, and he was out. In your case, your job is to make the call at 1B. You need to own this call. If you go to your partner, or if your partner comes out and overrules you (which is exactly how it will be interpreted by everyone in the park) then on every close play for the rest of the game you are going to get nothing but hassled, and if there is an argument, you will be asked to "appeal it to your partner, he had a better angle than you, etc". On every close play for the rest of that game you have made the PU your assistant base umpire. Further, when you called safe did you use the basic signal mechanic saying, "He's safe, he's off the bag", and moving both your arms to one side in a waving motion, or did you just signal safe, as in he beat the ball to the base? Using the mechanic to say that he missed the bag in your judgment explains to both dugouts what you saw, and you would not have heard a word from the defensive team's HC on the play. It sounds to me like like you had a big hesitation before you called safe in the first place, also leading me to think that F3 thought you made no call, so he was trying buy an out call from you. Now, everyone of us on the board who has participated in this discussion has a desire to get every call right, nobody wants to miss any call ever, especially a call like this at 1B. If the PU is doing his job he has other things to worry about than checking for a foot touching the bag on this play. A good PU would have said to you, "in my judgment he did," (or words to that effect) as opposed to what he told you, because if he's doing his job, he won't have a perfect angle to see the play either. If he does have such an angle he's not doing his job. What we are trying to tell you is: 1. That the call is yours to make. 2. You made it. That's what should happen on the play. 3. Trying to "get the call right" as you describe it with conferences and asking for help causes many more problems than it solves. and in this case all you have is the PU's guess substituting for your guess, not a good thing to have happen. 4. If you missed it, then find out why you missed it after the game and don't do it again. And for my .02: 5. Never let a team's HC get into your head like this one did. If you are asking about a call 2 or 3 innings later either you know you missed it, or the HC who said that has gotten you thinking about you missing a call, almost guaranteeing that your mind is on the previous call, instead of getting the next call right, almost a guarantee you will miss another close call in the game. In your judgment you got the call right. good call. If after the game you think you missed it, forget about it. the losing team did not lose the game because you might have missed the call. |
|
|||
|
I haven't chimed in on this conversation until now, but I've taken a great interest in it as I had a similar play two seasons ago and got into a real mess with it. Similar situation, defensive coach comes out and asks if the first baseman missed the bag or not. I was in B and didn't get the look at first that I should have so I had no problem checking with my partner. I asked my partner "Did the first baseman hit the base" and my partner says that he did so I rang up the out. Now the offensive coach comes to me and I explain that I didn't see the foot hit the base so I checked with my partner and he told me that the first baseman did hit the base and therefore we had an out. The coach objects stating that he my have hit the base on the second swipe, but in no way did he hit it on the first. I confirmed again with my partner, and he told me that he did get the base on the second swipe and not the first. Now I had to come back with another reversal and again ruled the runner safe. I now managed to piss off both coaches with one call (which is a rare accomplishment) and look like a complete idiot on the play.
I learned a valuable lesson on this occasion in that I'm now asking a partner only "what did you see" and not a specific question if I confer with them and also that going to your partner sometimes creates more problems than it solves. I like the earlier point about owning your own calls, and I think I'm going to look moreso at using that philosophy in the future.
__________________
I'm due to make a great call. After all, I've been officiating a long time !!! |
|
|||||
|
Quote:
Quote:
Nothing of any consequence happened. Nothing at all. MOF, after giving the coaches their say, you are in a perfect position to toss. "Coach, you came out and wanted me to get the call right. We did exactly what you wanted. That will be all." Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
|
|