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I'm sure there is more to the story....
I will say that I did something similar a few years ago.... HS JV game working solo. In the bottom of the first inning, home team has batted through their lineup twice and is starting the third time through. We are at approx batter number 20 for the half inning. Two outs, batter hits a ground ball to F4, who fields and bobbles the ball, then throws to first. The runner was perhaps a step beyond the bag and I called her out. The first base coach started to protest, then realized the situation and calmly returned to his dugout.....
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It's what you learn after you think you know it all that's important! |
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NOT a response to any specific post; but last year I saw a team score 12 in the first, 9 in the second and then lose.
Granted, two awful teams, but outcomes are not always obvious.
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Officiating takes more than OJT. It's not our jobs to invent rulings to fit our personal idea of what should and should not be. |
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The lesson learned from this current incident is pretty sobering. Always give it your best, because you just never know who's out there taking video of your game. This was likely a HS game with very few fans in the stands, but that should not matter. Virtually everyone nowadays carries a smartphone with them, and they could easily record something you do on the field for the sake of wanting to end a lopsided game, and make it go viral. And it's not just calls we make. It's actions when we think nobody's paying attention to us. If you're the type person who feels compelled to laugh and cut-up and physically touch female players in the dugout during equipment checks (and, Yes, I have seen it!), or virtually strips naked in the parking lot when suiting up prior to or changing after the game, or you have a tendency to grab your crotch while standing there between innings, you may end up seeing yourself in those extremely compromising positions later on the internet. Nothing is really private anymore. So don't set yourself up.
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"Let's face it. Umpiring is not an easy or happy way to make a living. In the abuse they suffer, and the pay they get for it, you see an imbalance that can only be explained by their need to stay close to a game they can't resist." -- Bob Uecker |
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I know we all feel compelled to ease things along when clueless coach doesn't know when to stop pouring it on. And this probably applies to baseball/softball more than most other sports, as we usually have no clock to save us like we do in other sports.
But this is NOT OUR JOB. Our job is to call what we see. To rule on what actually happens. Not to AFFECT what actually happens. The day we decide to take matters into our own hands might just be the day we put our entire profession to shame and end up on youtube like this guy.
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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A FRICKIN MEN!! I don't know how often I tell coaches no when they bellow "ask for help, ask for help" on a close play. Even worse is when you are taking care of it and your partner approaches. It simply gives the coach the chance to engage them. Unless I ask you, stay away and stay quiet. |
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I'm truly and honestly trying to learn here. I'm not trying to pick. But I have to ask, if there's a chance that you have badly blown a call, and a coach is saying "ask for help" while your partner has already started walking toward you, what is more important--your autonomy while following the rule OR the right call? When a coach says "ask for help", I can tell you from my own perspective, he or she is saying "Look, you blew that badly, I'm trying to save you here and give you a big hint that you need to ask for help." The game is not about the umpires. It's not about the coaches. And it's not about the fans in the stands. It's about the kids playing on the field, and their confidence in the adults to do the right thing to the best of their ability. Again, I am truly trying to understand and ask the question here as opposed to standing on a field in front of a crowd or camera and asking these question. But why can't the umpires just simply trust each other and realize that your colleague isn't going to overturn a call unless they are 100% sure it needs to be overturned? Would it be better if the other umpire looked at the coach and said "The rule does not allow me to say anything unless he asks for help?" I'd highly doubt that, but that is the honest answer. And I'm not talking about bang-bang judgement calls. I'm talking about things like a called out on a tag when the ball is literally laying on the ground beside the runner who just slid into third as a prime example. I've seen that very scenario happen, and the home plate umpire just stood there quietly while the entire universe screamed "he dropped the ball" to the 3rd base umpire who refused to even look at the home plate umpire. |
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For every umpire out there that will refuse to ask for help in an obvious "help" setting such as you describe, there is an equal (or higher) number of coaches that simply want to be able to challenge every judgment made, right or wrong, that doesn't go FOR their team. And the same number that will go ballistic if an umpire does get help and the reversal goes against their team, even if the reversal is clear and obvious to everyone else on the field. There are umpires out there, just like coaches, that think they can overrule their fellow umpire. And any and every time that happens, the game goes to hell, sooner or later, as one umpire wants to substitute his judgment for the other umpire's judgment. Soon, every judgment call is being questioned; and we are no longer playing softball, the issue becomes which coach can push the envelope further. You are correct when you say the game is not about the umpires, the coaches, or the parents. But is also isn't about the kids, either; that is simply the most often repeated mantra of those that cannot or will not think beyond that, and want things their way. The integrity of the game itself is the most important concern all should have; you can still teach quality life lessons to those kids when human error happens. Teach them that human beings make mistakes; teach them that they need to have the internal strength and fortitude to overcome human mistakes, rather than blame others. Teach them that life isn't always fair, and that the outcome of any part of their life, just like a game, can often be subject to things they don't like or agree with, and simply cannot control. Teach them that a softball game (ANY GAME) isn't life or death; teach them that losing a game may not be as much fun as winning, but it is still just a game. It may not be who you are; I don't know you. But I do know, in my 44th year in this game, that too many coaches and parents seem more focused on the outcome of a game, and their ability to CONTROL, rather than the life lessons that the game represents. And when the game has no integrity because the parties think there are no rules, manners, respect, or proper protocol, then it has nothing for "the kids". That's a mantra, not an ethic. As I suggested in an earlier reply, I would be more open to revisiting umpire judgment when the coaches agree to replay their decision with the umpires when they make a stupid coaching mistake.
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Steve ASA/ISF/NCAA/NFHS/PGF |
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Mountain Coach: I'm not talking about obvious help situations like you described. I should have been more broad, like Steve replied, in that I meant the coaches who yell the request on every play. I should have worded that a bit better.
And to my point earlier, a coach yelling "ask for help, ask for help" is not a proper appeal. |
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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I don't know that it is the Umpires that think this......I think it is the coaches that have determined that they have the right to "ask for help" on any call they don't like.....
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It's what you learn after you think you know it all that's important! |
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Actually, that's just half the problem. The other half are umpires who believe it's better to acquiesce to those coaches to "keep the peace" than to tell those coaches to pound sand. Amazes me when my partner will come to me and say, "I'm not going to change my call, but I'm just here to make the coach think I'm getting help." I want to tell him/her, "Go back to your position and stop wasting daylight."
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"Let's face it. Umpiring is not an easy or happy way to make a living. In the abuse they suffer, and the pay they get for it, you see an imbalance that can only be explained by their need to stay close to a game they can't resist." -- Bob Uecker |
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Mostly baseball umpire here, but this question can easily be applied at the softball level. I have always been taught by my instructors at the level I've worked (youth and HS JV, plus HS varsity level tournaments), that there is a particular rule of thumb when it comes to bang-bang plays.
I've been told that if you have a bang-bang play that you read what happened, and that if the fielder made a diving stop or a long range throw, you bang the kid out and reward the defense. But if the runner is hustling butt down the line and/or the fielder bobbles the ball and makes it a much closer play than it should be, then you reward the offense and call the runner safe. I'm talking about just plays at first base. Have most of you other umpers been taught the same thing, or is this just something that is taught in my state? And if you have been taught, do you agree with that philosophy? Or do you have the philosophy that you make the call based on what you saw, no matter if the fielder made a great play or bobbled the ball 3 times before making the throw to first. I'm just curious what you guys think about it. Thanks, I'll hang up and listen. |
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I have heard people say that.
This usually tells me that the person is comfortable with the idea that he/she is unable to determine what happens first on a bang bang play. And it usually shows in the rest of their umpiring. I have never understood why people continue to add or subtract things from an otherwise easy task. It's really simple... Decide which happened first and rule accordingly. Adding other things to judge or grade generally make you worse at your job.
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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Coaches & fans reward players.
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Officiating takes more than OJT. It's not our jobs to invent rulings to fit our personal idea of what should and should not be. |
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