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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sat May 07, 2011, 08:16am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Snaqwells View Post
Hmm, you seem to be taking a different tact. The obvious context was a coach yelling at an umpire. You're saying you allow that because it's not against the rules?

I had to work two games that went VERY late last night. Just awoke and saw your post. Mike (mcrowder) answered it perfectly. It is not against the rules for a coach to be loud, let alone state his opinion of the play. If he argues it we have a different story. In the OP, the coach did nothing wrong.
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Old Sat May 07, 2011, 09:41am
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Originally Posted by MikeStrybel View Post
It is not against the rules for a coach to be loud, let alone state his opinion of the play.
Depends. Many conferences list "inciting/inciteful behavior" as grounds for an ejection. Example: a coach "yelling" from the dugout or a coach's box across the diamond his "opinion" of a call will not last long in most D-1 games in this area. He'll get one for free and an offer to come out and talk. If he declines and continues to be "loud" in his expression. He will leave.
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Old Sat May 07, 2011, 09:53am
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Originally Posted by MrUmpire View Post
Depends. Many conferences list "inciting/inciteful behavior" as grounds for an ejection. Example: a coach "yelling" from the dugout or a coach's box across the diamond his "opinion" of a call will not last long in most D-1 games in this area. He'll get one for free and an offer to come out and talk. If he declines and continues to be "loud" in his expression. He will leave.
True, but most D1 coaches aren't going to be "yelling" across the field. They know what they can get away with, and usually go to the "edge".

D2 - D3 and HS coaches, they don't know and usually are the culprits. They generally go "over the edge" has been my experience.

Thanks
David
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Old Sat May 07, 2011, 12:00pm
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Originally Posted by MrUmpire View Post
Depends. Many conferences list "inciting/inciteful behavior" as grounds for an ejection. Example: a coach "yelling" from the dugout or a coach's box across the diamond his "opinion" of a call will not last long in most D-1 games in this area. He'll get one for free and an offer to come out and talk. If he declines and continues to be "loud" in his expression. He will leave.
Edited to add: Just noticed that this was an assistant coach. He might not get the free one. Depends on what he's yelling. If he's keeping count of what I "owe him" he's certainly done.
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Old Sat May 07, 2011, 12:38pm
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A number of us have already stated that there is nothing illegal about a coach stating his opinion on a play. He can do it loudly, as well. I have never seen a conference restrict that right. No, D-1 schools do not limit a coach's vocal volume. There are a number of rules about what he can say, when he can say it but not how loud he can do it.

Watch LaRussa work a plate umpire from the dugout some day. Paul Mainieri, Mike Gillespie, Chad Kreuter, Tim Esmay, Jim Morris, Mark Marquess, to name a few, are elite but volatile coaches who yell aplenty. The guys working those games know that yelling an opinion is not arguing. Commitment to that opinion may warrant further action and the rules allow us to handle them appropriately. No need to be an OOO.
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Old Sat May 07, 2011, 01:14pm
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Nothing OOO about taking care of business with a skip that is "inciting" the crowd or his team. Haven't seen a conference yet call that a bad ejection.

How does volume come into play? Neither the crowd or umpire would have heard it otherwise.

Dave Yeast used to have a name for umpires who left it up to others to take of business. I won't repeat it here.
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Old Sat May 07, 2011, 03:51pm
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If you believe a coach is 'inciting' the crowd by yelling that a balk occured then you should retire or at least confine yourself to games where a tee and soft baseball are involved. You won't have to worry about coaches yelling "That was a balk." then.
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Old Sat May 07, 2011, 04:43pm
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Originally Posted by MikeStrybel View Post
If you believe a coach is 'inciting' the crowd by yelling that a balk occured then you should retire or at least confine yourself to games where a tee and soft baseball are involved. You won't have to worry about coaches yelling "That was a balk." then.
If anyone was making that point, I'd agree. They should burn their gear, donate their unis to Goodwill and be forced to listen to Michelle Bachmann speeches on a loop for days at a time.

But, thankfully, I didn't notice anyone in this thread stating that. I certainly didn't. If you find someone did, let me know and we'll both call them OOO's.

Last edited by MrUmpire; Sat May 07, 2011 at 04:45pm.
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Old Sun May 08, 2011, 06:45am
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Short Memory?

Quote:
Originally Posted by MrUmpire View Post
Depends. Many conferences list "inciting/inciteful behavior" as grounds for an ejection. Example: a coach "yelling" from the dugout or a coach's box across the diamond his "opinion" of a call will not last long in most D-1 games in this area. He'll get one for free and an offer to come out and talk. If he declines and continues to be "loud" in his expression. He will leave.

I'll send you the lighter and arrange for Goodwill to come by and pick up the unis you won't be needing any more.
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Old Sun May 08, 2011, 10:44am
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Originally Posted by MikeStrybel View Post
I'll send you the lighter and arrange for Goodwill to come by and pick up the unis you won't be needing any more.


Nice try...no cigar. You are so willing to attempt to discredit others, you don't read what you copy and quote.

Lets examine the real facts:

You stated: "If you believe a coach is 'inciting' the crowd by yelling that a balk occured then you should retire or at least confine yourself to games where a tee and soft baseball are involved. You won't have to worry about coaches yelling "That was a balk." then."

I replied that I had done no such thing. In you attempt to prove me wrong you quoted me as having earlier written:

"Depends. Many conferences list "inciting/inciteful behavior" as grounds for an ejection. Example: a coach "yelling" from the dugout or a coach's box across the diamond his "opinion" of a call will not last long in most D-1 games in this area. He'll get one for free and an offer to come out and talk. If he declines and continues to be "loud" in his expression. He will leave."

Now then, put on your best reading glasses and find, for me, where I addressed anybody yelling "That was a balk", or in any general sense addressed a balk at all.

My post, as did other posts, (DavidB's for one) addressed the habit some coaches have of yelling across the diamond, in an inciting manner. I pointed out that conferences I have worked for called for an ejection if that behavior continued.

No mention of balk. I did not advocate ejecting anyone for yelling "That's a balk," Go ahead, read it again.

My point was, and is, if a coach continues to YELL across the diamond his disagreement with call, let's say a banger at first, he is exhibiting behavior that is inciting to the crowd and his team. If he continues doing so after being warned to stop, he will be ejected. This was specifically covered at an NCAA clinic and has been pretty well accepted by most umpires I know, even some from Illinois.

Does content matter? Of course it does. If the coach is yelling what a great ump and overall sweetheart I am, what the heck. But if he is one of those who likes to scream, "That's three you owe us!." He's not going to be around much longer.

Last edited by MrUmpire; Sun May 08, 2011 at 11:12am.
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  #11 (permalink)  
Old Sun May 08, 2011, 11:34am
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The first time ANY coach yells anything similar to "Thats a Balk" he gets the look with the mask off. The second time he gets hold in so many words that there is only 2 people on the field that is going to use those words and he is not one of them. That might be inciting but I take this as serious arguing balls and strikes.

If the coach want to say some thing like "hey jerry can you watch this guys he isn't really pausing" and he says it in a respectful way and not trying to show me up, well then we don't have a problem.
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old Mon May 09, 2011, 06:17am
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The OP has been addressed numerous times. Some feel that a coach has no right to raise his voice while on a field. Others KNOW he does. Officiate however you need.

The content and timing of the coaches voice does matter. That is something I wrote long ago and I'm glad to see it is finally understood.

Others can insist that yelling an opinion is inciting, it isn't. The higher up you go the more you will know that this happens and such intensity is often ignored by worthy umpires. A stare in the coach's direction (mask on) is often all it takes to get the response we need. LaRussa tried it the other day and Drake handled it EXACTLY that way. A few days earlier, a controversial balk call was met with hoots and hollers from the offender's dugout. The ENTIRE crew ignored the yelling. In yesterday's Texas/NY game, Ron Washington was SCREAMING about a missed touch at first base. He was allowed to vent without being dumped for 'inciting', yelling, screaming, etc. MLB Quickpitch is on every morning and highlights what the best umpires do. Still, if you want to eject because a coach yells something that you can't handle otherwise, umpire away.

The OP does not warrant an ejection of the coach for yelling as he did. It's time to move on.

Last edited by MikeStrybel; Mon May 09, 2011 at 07:10am.
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