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Exactly. And on the play described you would not have seen dirt between the foot and the plate. So I guess you wouldn't call it, even though the 216.75 square inch portion wasn't touched.
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If you are asking me then my answer is I wouldn't call it unless I was sure. Seeing dirt would provide the certainty. I am not down there with a magnifying glass and micrometer, I'm maybe 4 or 5 feet away and I want to be sure
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No, I wasn't asking you'd call. I was trying to clarify your own statements (which seem to conflict).
First you said that the runner had to touch the white, then you presented a scenario about "seeing dirt" whereby a runner could touch only the black and you wouldn't call that as missing the plate. |
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~Sigh~
Sorry, this enire thread made my skin crawl . . .
This would neverhave happened in my game . . . even if I took the BR and lead him to the plate. Someone is proud of being an OOO. Let them . . . The rest of us will work real baseball. |
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Sorry if you're offended. I'd be offended if you refused to call it so I guess we're even. And Tim (and Steve) . I've had players miss a base. I've had players miss home. The times they got caught I got after them, not the umpire. Why? Because they missed the base. Their fault.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong Last edited by Rich Ives; Wed Jul 06, 2011 at 11:27pm. |
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Just an observation/thought. If the runner touches only the black part of the plate and you absolutely know this as fact, what advantage has he gained by doing this?
What do you do on a game winning score where you have no idea if the runner touches the plate at all? You may scream and yell at the players but their excitement makes it impossible to see the touch. Can you or would you call him out without having any evidence that he didnt touch the plate? I personally file this under the "sometimes you have to umpire" tab. As JJ likes to say, "dont go looking for buggers"!!!!!!!! |
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What makes you think a player that touched a visible portion of home plate is subject to being put out on appeal? Not in the real world. Not a legitimate appeal. Whenever a player actually does not touch a base, and the defense appeals, I always, 100% of the time, call the runner out on appeal. Any coach who argues vociferously that a players foot only touched the black part of the exposed plate is a total douche, and being a rat would be the least of their worldly troubles.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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~Sigh~
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What you see as cheating I see as "game management." T |
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Whatever you do, don't bring up the black part of a plate on the softball board. I had a situation I posted a couple weeks ago over there where I mentioned the black part of the plate was exposed, and was told that the field was unplayable in that condition!
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"Not all heroes have time to pose for sculptors...some still have papers to grade." |
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Just because somebody told you that doesn't mean that it is an official interpretation issued by any sanctioning body.
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You are truly arrogant. All your "game management" does is change which team is ticked off at you. It doesn't manage feces.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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If you do enough games, your going to eventually get the question, "Hey Blue , where is your strike zone, can you explain it?".
Legitimate question. I used to have a partner who always would reply, "It is whereever I say it is!" You are paid to make professional determinations about strike zones, touching a base or plate and many other decision's. Based upon your experience you are to make the best decision you can. Were becoming like the freaking media on this forum, always perfect crtics but, useless as human beings in real life. If after several years of officiating you can't make a professional decision of when a player has touched a plate or not, sell your dam equipment and do the rest of us a favor and quit officiating. This applies to new officials coming up also. |
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Here is the bottom line for me: I see all kinds of home plates on the crappy high school fields on which I umpire adult ball. If the runner touches any portion of what is passing as home plate in a particular game, that runner has touched the plate, and you can stick your appeal directly. If he misses touching a part of the facsimile of home plate, he may be subject to an appeal.
I would think any umpire would have a difficult time explaining to a manager that the runner did not touch the plate because he only touched a black edge. Talk about OOO.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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Do you apply the same criteria to other bases? If the catcher notices and appeals which team are you screwing?
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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