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B. This is your call, not your partner's. Don't go for help on this one. If you think not ejecting causes problems, just wait until you eject on the word of a partner who has other responsibilities.
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"I don't think I'm very happy. I always fall asleep to the sound of my own screams...and then I always get woken up to the sound of my own screams. Do you think I'm unhappy?" |
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+10
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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no interference, no slide rule infraction, and if no flagerant elbow - it's a verbal "That's Nothing" with a safe sign mechanic...runner scores. The defensive coach is trying to get an out call after HIS own player made a horsesh!t throw that caused the whole mess in the first place. In my opinion, I don't think it was necessarily a bad thing to get a "second" opinion from your partner ON THE ELBOW part only... maybe from his angle, he could have seen something that you may have missed because of how the play developed. Hopefully, your discussion was brief... "Did you see the runner throw an elbow - No - ok, coach, he's got nothing as well...let's go back to work" Just my two cents...
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I have a serious problem with holding "board meetings" about plays at the plate. Call me "old school" but I am right there, among the offense and defense and in the correct position. So why do I want to involve my partner who can be anywhere from 90'+ away? Just to please a coach? If he does not like my decision, then he can leave. I do not believe in "joint decisions". Yes, yes..... I know that this is not the thinking of the 21st Century but like I said, I am old school. No one can convince me that a person 90'+ away has a better view than I (if I am where we are supposed to be).
Just a thought.
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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What do you have? Apparently, a clueless coach who is grasping at straws to try talking you into an out that simply isn't there.
You saw the play. You saw the runner raise his arm. You judged that whatever the runner did was not malicious contact. End of story. There's nothing to check with your partner about. |
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The contact does not have to be malicious. If the raised arm was an attempt to dislodge the ball, it would be INT.
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"Malice/ malicious" does not relate primarily to the severity or intensity of the act or contact; rather it is determined by the conscious intent to do harm/ wrong [and in some cases, willful indifference to the probability of doing harm]. I'm not disagreeing with dash that the raised arm could be INT: merely asserting that it COULD, if intentionally done to interfere by dislodging the ball, also merit an EJ for malicious contact. And, FWIW, count me among those who doubt that a conv which results in a delayed MC call is a first-class idea, even on get-it-right-at-all-costs grounds. MC is a lot like Potter Stewart's rule about pornography: I may not be able to give you an iron-clad all-encompassing definition, but I know it [immediately] when I see it. Last edited by cbfoulds; Thu Nov 10, 2011 at 05:08pm. |
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But my point wasn't to get into the intricacies of malicious contact. The OP says that he saw the arm go up, judged it to be an incidental defensive move by the runner and did not think it was either interference or malicious. What do you ask your partner at that point? Do you ask him if your judgment sucks? I understand asking for help if there's some element of the play you might reasonably think you missed. This umpire says he saw it, so he didn't miss it. Last edited by BretMan; Fri Nov 11, 2011 at 02:33pm. |
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We cannot delegate judgment
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In the OP, though, the defense was arguing a case of judgment on intent. I'm not sure if my organization agrees (Little League is getting a little "board meeting" happy), but I can't imagine that I'd ever go to another umpire to determine the intent of the players right in front of me.
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-LilLeaguer |
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