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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Wed May 04, 2011, 12:31pm
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Originally Posted by mbcrowder View Post
I don't know ... trying to correct the other team's pitcher and getting upset that the umpire wouldn't coach the kid sounds a little ratty to me. Jury's still out.
I called time to ask a question about the situation. I never said anything to the Umpire after him giving me the answer (Prior to the question being asked). I never tried to correct the pitcher at all. I could have went to the coach and voiced my concern but I didn't (Should have).

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Originally Posted by mbcrowder View Post
Not to mention your first post and someone else's last post timing...
I have no clue what this means.
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Old Wed May 04, 2011, 12:41pm
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Originally Posted by Coach Dykhoff View Post
I called time to ask a question about the situation. I never said anything to the Umpire after him giving me the answer (Prior to the question being asked). I never tried to correct the pitcher at all. I could have went to the coach and voiced my concern but I didn't (Should have).
Why should you have? Seems to me the best way to teach this lesson you wanted to teach was the way you did it; taking advantage of it.
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Old Wed May 04, 2011, 12:48pm
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I have played many years of baseball and as a coach I feel I should coach everyone (Wierd I know). Even if I see someone on the other team doing something incorrectly I want to correct them, but don't because I don't want to show up their coach. I coach youth baseball to teach them for the next level. If they don't learn what they have to learn prior to the next level they are behind the power curve. Maybe this is why I am a volunteer coach in a league that I don't have a kid in.

I am also one of those coaches that teaches my kids by showing them. I do sliding practice, diving practice, infield practice etc. at practice with the kids. I don't like just telling them and getting on them when they do it wrong because the misunderstood me. If I show them there is not much misunderstanding about that.
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Last edited by Coach Dykhoff; Wed May 04, 2011 at 12:51pm.
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Old Thu May 05, 2011, 07:20am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Coach Dykhoff View Post
I have played many years of baseball and as a coach I feel I should coach everyone (Wierd I know). Even if I see someone on the other team doing something incorrectly I want to correct them, but don't because I don't want to show up their coach. I coach youth baseball to teach them for the next level. If they don't learn what they have to learn prior to the next level they are behind the power curve. Maybe this is why I am a volunteer coach in a league that I don't have a kid in.

I am also one of those coaches that teaches my kids by showing them. I do sliding practice, diving practice, infield practice etc. at practice with the kids. I don't like just telling them and getting on them when they do it wrong because the misunderstood me. If I show them there is not much misunderstanding about that.
You are just the kind of coach that I would want coaching my kids. Active, knowledgeable, and a desire that is lacking in most volunteer coaches. I also admire your desire to learn the rules of the game; another thing that most volunteer (and pro) coaches will not do. But, please remember that umpires also know the rules (for the most part), and the majority of them don’t like to have coaches holding rules clinics during the game.
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Old Thu May 05, 2011, 10:10am
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After reading several of your recent posts, Coach Dykhoff, I'd say you are doing your kids a great service teaching them fundamentals and the correct rules. However, one more thing they (and you) will need to understand is that, in a lot of rec ball league's umpires only know what their own fathers have taught them years ago, and that information can be incorrect. You will get nowhere trying to correct them.
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Old Thu May 05, 2011, 10:12am
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Coach, if you have seen this post, then disregard.

Top Baseball/Softball Rules Myths, 2011 Edition
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Old Thu May 05, 2011, 10:17am
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I concur - you won't get the best umpiring in those youth games from a rules standpoint (at least around here) but you won't get the best baseball either.

To worry about the umpires is doing the kids at that level a disservice. Its teaching them to whine, complain, assume the umpire is wrong, etc. Then, if any of them get good, they have a bad approach and attitude that holds them back. The best players are the ones that don't flip out when something doesn't go their way. They just take a deep breath, retoe the rubber or step back in, and do what they know how to do.

Baseball is a calm sport, kind of like golf in that sense. You can't be all hyper out there. Teach your kids to be cool to umpires and they'll become better players and probably better people.
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Old Wed May 04, 2011, 02:56pm
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Originally Posted by Coach Dykhoff View Post
I called time to ask a question about the situation. I never said anything to the Umpire after him giving me the answer (Prior to the question being asked). I never tried to correct the pitcher at all
Just going by your own words: "However when I tried to correct the situation the Umpire made me look like an *** and didn't correct it himself."
Quote:
I could have went to the coach and voiced my concern but I didn't (Should have).
Should have? No, you shouldn't have - but you've made my point for me.

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I have no clue what this means.
Maybe you do, maybe you don't... time will tell.
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Old Wed May 04, 2011, 09:50pm
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I have a lot of stolen bases on 2nd pitch after runner sees it with this move, but no balks.
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