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But, no, according to the author, Diaz might be in for a reprimand. It was probably nothing to start with. Rita |
There is definitely something not being said in this story. One of my favorite sayings regarding dealing with the press is, " they can't use what you don't say against you".
My final answer, 'no comment'. |
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Then I might as well bowl the ball back to the Pitcher. LOL MTD, Sr. |
The catcher claimed in his interview that throwing the ball back to the pitcher kept his arm loose for attempted steals. (I don't buy it because he has every other pitch he catches to throw back) I think though an manager may have an argument here. He'd get tossed for sure, but I think the umpire was obviously trying to show up the catcher in this case.
There is nothing in the rules that determines who throws the ball back to the pitcher...do you think we may have another rule soon? |
I'm the umpire here, you haven't earned that right to tell me who's throwing this ball back:eek:
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Peace |
Only in Majors Games!
I only throw it back to the pitcher for the small diamond LOL! Don't want to look bad by not getting the ball there or overthrowing! :)
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During warm-ups between innings, I will stand near a batters box. When the pitch gets by the catcher, I will bounce a spare ball back to pitcher essentially bowling it towards the mound, just hard enough for it to get back to the rubber. Bowling it like this also prevents the catcher from chasing the ball and on his subsequent throw, sending it into the outfield because he thought that the additional twenty feet meant he had to heave it as hard as he could. Maybe I just don't have patience to wait for the catcher to run after 5 passed balls, and I would spend more time arguing with the coaches about why Jimmy only got two warmup throws in his "one-minute warmup" between innings, so its a nice preventative compromise that keeps things moving. |
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