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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Mon May 08, 2017, 09:07pm
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you get micromanaged to this degree?!? uh.....ok
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Old Mon May 08, 2017, 09:19pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by scrounge View Post
you get micromanaged to this degree?!? uh.....ok
I have yet to see where "an umpire locks their hands on their knees as the pitcher receives the ball and remains in this position for the entire pitch". I tried a few sets per the ASA instructions and it is VERY awkward. Guess that's how they get you not to do it.

It is what it is.
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 07:01am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by scrounge View Post
you get micromanaged to this degree?!? uh.....ok
Things are weird all over...

Scrounge, I'm sure that you are familiar with the Central Ohio Baseball Umpires Association.

Back around 2004 I had started using the Gerry Davis stance. About that same time I was scheduled for an on-field evaluation by one of the senior umpires for that group (who I believe is still with the group).

On my evaluation I was dinged for "putting my hands on my knees" and told that a plate umpire should NEVER do that. I was using the stance exactly as it's described, working a little bit higher and a little bit farther back and I got dinged for "being too high and too far back" too.

We can get goofy advice from a variety of sources!
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 08:10am
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Originally Posted by BretMan View Post
Things are weird all over...

Scrounge, I'm sure that you are familiar with the Central Ohio Baseball Umpires Association.

Back around 2004 I had started using the Gerry Davis stance. About that same time I was scheduled for an on-field evaluation by one of the senior umpires for that group (who I believe is still with the group).

On my evaluation I was dinged for "putting my hands on my knees" and told that a plate umpire should NEVER do that. I was using the stance exactly as it's described, working a little bit higher and a little bit farther back and I got dinged for "being too high and too far back" too.

We can get goofy advice from a variety of sources!
Heh...yes, I'm fairly connected in that group You were a trailblazer - heck, most of the senior guys use it now.
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 08:35am
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I can't get over the fact they can't spell Gerry. The guy's been an MLB umpire forever and sells equipment, too.
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 08:51am
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Originally Posted by Rich View Post
I can't get over the fact they can't spell Gerry. The guy's been an MLB umpire forever and sells equipment, too.
Well, apparently in some parts of this country, Gerry with a G is considered as the feminine alternative to Jerry with a J, or so I was informed.
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 09:12am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rich View Post
I can't get over the fact they can't spell Gerry. The guy's been an MLB umpire forever and sells equipment, too.
Quote:
Originally Posted by IRISHMAFIA View Post
Well, apparently in some parts of this country, Gerry with a G is considered as the feminine alternative to Jerry with a J, or so I was informed.
Or, maybe it is to avoid infringing... Gerry DavisŪ

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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 11:13am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by IRISHMAFIA View Post
Well, apparently in some parts of this country, Gerry with a G is considered as the feminine alternative to Jerry with a J, or so I was informed.
Perhaps. But it IS the way he spells his name. If anyone should know how to spell it correctly, I would expect the staff at NUS to know.

I do have a question about the modified GD, however. When I worked baseball, the GD was introduced in camps and clinics I attended, and required us to square up in the slot but higher and further back than you would for the heel-toe stance. What actually is different under the "modified" version? I've been told it was just that the feet are back to being heel-toe instead of square, but is there more to it?

Also, don't you have to adjust the width of your feet to adjust to the top of each batter's strike zone? It seems counterintuitive to have to spread your feet wider for those shorter batters; your using different widths for different batters. I prefer to always have my feet the same width apart, and then just sit down lower for those shorter players.
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 11:38am
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Originally Posted by Manny A View Post
I do have a question about the modified GD, however. When I worked baseball, the GD was introduced in camps and clinics I attended, and required us to square up in the slot but higher and further back than you would for the heel-toe stance. What actually is different under the "modified" version? I've been told it was just that the feet are back to being heel-toe instead of square, but is there more to it?

Also, don't you have to adjust the width of your feet to adjust to the top of each batter's strike zone? It seems counterintuitive to have to spread your feet wider for those shorter batters; your using different widths for different batters. I prefer to always have my feet the same width apart, and then just sit down lower for those shorter players.
It so happens I wrote something on another (local) board today explaining why we work the mechanics we do (he was particularly blaming the slot for inconsistent outside corner calls). Some of it answers your primary question about the modified GD as it should apply in softball, and why it HAS TO BE different than baseball to be effective.

As to the second, if you WANT to be locked and set with eyes at the top, spreading wider is the best way to adjust to different batter heights. Sitting differently is equally counter-intuitive, and it relies on muscles to stay set and locked, whereas the locked body set of the GD takes the strain OFF the muscles.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ATLUMPSTEVE
The "old school" way of standing behind the catcher is better described as a baseball set, rather than softball. And even MLB and all their schools now teach/preach the slot, because the umpire CAN see the ball in the zone better. Here's why.

Look at where batters stand in baseball. The vast majority stand in the very back of the batter's box. Put the catcher even farther back, the umpire behind him. In most cases, the umpire is now 6', or even more, behind the plate. Why is that significant? Because, no matter what else you may have heard, the strike zone is defined by the ball when it crosses the plate, not when it passes the batter, no matter where the batter stands. Nor by where the catcher catches it. The umpire is to visualize the batter standing directly even with the plate to determine the height (both top and bottom) of the strike zone for that batter.

Can an umpire 6' behind the plate see over a catcher and see the ball over the plate? Yes, although the umpire cannot set the head/eyes at the top of the zone, he must look down from over the catcher, and judge both the top and bottom of the zone at a place somewhere up there. And if the catcher pops up, the umpire sees NOTHING. It's not so easy.

Now think where batters stand in softball. The vast majority (at least in upper level ball) stand in the very front of the box. That helps them get the ball before a last break, helps keep the batted ball fair. Smart catchers move up, too; it's a great target for the pitcher to hit a glove that is 1' behind the plate, and it helps the catcher grab that drop before it bounces. Now apply geometry and tell me where an umpire sets to SEE the ball when it actually passes the plate that the catcher's body is right behind? To be behind the catcher and see the plate, the umpire would have to stand straight up and look straight down. Poor position to judge height, leaves the umpire as a target to hit by pitches and foul balls, and if the catcher pops; well, that's an automatic ball.

The strike zone is a rectangle, with four sides; if you could limit the judgment to just two of those dimensions, wouldn't an umpire be more consistent? So, if an umpire can set his eyes on the top of each batter's zone, and also with his nose on the inside corner, two of the parameters are locked, and only two remaining are judgments. If eyes are at the top of the zone, the bottom of the zone is actually CLOSER than if looking down over the top, so the umpire should be more consistent on the bottom as well. If the umpire sets his nose on the edge of the batter's box on the inside, with his eyes at the top of the zone, and moves forward so that his head is almost next to the catcher, the umpire can lock in the top, lock in the inside edge, be close to the bottom, see the ball all the away across the plate and all the way into the catcher's glove. If the catcher pops up, who cares? The umpire still sees PAST the catcher, across the plate, across and thru the zone.

So what about the outside corner? Yes, it's judgment; but it's exactly where it has been all my career!! The inside "river" is 6" wide, the plate is 17" wide, the outside "river" is 6" wide. Same spot every day and night. And the umpire sees the ball across the plate, and the good catcher stick that spot on the edge (and the poorly taught catcher DRAG that ball back, saying to EVERYONE "that's a ball, I know I need to make it LOOK better").

Any catcher that sets up directly behind the catcher in fast pitch is calling balls and strikes based on where the ball was last visible BEFORE it reaches the plate (guesstimating where it passed the plate instead of seeing it); and the best pitchers' job is to make the batter chase that pitch she thinks a strike when it is not, and a ball which will break back into the zone taken for a called strike. I'm not seeing any plus to fooling the umpire the same way, having him judge balls and strikes before they are either.

The three most common reasons an umpire cannot consistently see an accurate zone (aside from mistakes or simply poor judgment) are 1) NOT in the slot, 2) set too deep (the deeper you are, the more the catcher's presence blocks the plate), or set too high (forcing judgment on the top of the zone, and making the bottom even farther away. I'm not selling you the "ASA" mechanics because I am a lifer; I'm telling you how I help umpires that I evaluate to improve their game.
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 08:48am
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Strictly personal, but been there, done that.

When I first moved away from the balloon (1967), my stance was similar to what is now claimed as the GD stance which really isn't anything new.

To start, the stance many use in today's version provides less protection to your quads. AFA the hands, have you ever caught a foul ball on the hand when it is not on your knees or leg? When I was young, I got away from placing my hands above my knees simply because it gives them no place to go if hit. IOW, your hand is between the ball and a hard place. Okay, so it isn't that hard, but it is not as forgiving as I would like if being struck by a hard object.

I also found myself locking into a position. I see it now with some umpires using their knees for support. Yes, it can be comfortable, but I've seen comfort placed over positioning. Watch some of the youth ball on TV this summer and see how many umpires using the GD can/will drop to the top of the zone.

Like I said, strictly personal preference based upon years of different experiences
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Old Tue May 09, 2017, 10:12am
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On a side note.

Quote:
Originally Posted by BretMan View Post
From the July 2016 "Plays and Clarifications" on the USA website:


July 2016 Plays and Clarifications
JULY 17, 2016, 10 P.M. (ET)

Mechanic Issues: Plate Mechanics

As we prepare for the 2016 National Championship season it is imperative that we review several areas of our plate mechanics that have caused concern around the nation.

The first topic we would like to discuss is placing your hands on your knees as a locking mechanism for your body. We have always taught that having your hands in front of your body in a comfortable positon is the desired mechanic. However, some umpires prefer to place their hands on their knees to lock themselves in their plate stance. Steadying yourself by placing your hands on your knees is acceptable as long as three things happen. First, you must go to the set position at the top of the strike zone prior to placing your hands on your knees. Second, you should not be resting your weight on your knees. Third, you should not be locked into this position waiting for the pitcher to perform their preliminaries and start the pitch; but instead, as mentioned above, you should wait to place your hands on your knees as you reach the set position. Remember the modified Jerry Davis stance, where an umpire locks their hands on their knees as the pitcher receives the ball and remains in this position for the entire pitch is not acceptable in ASA/USA Softball.
Quote:
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you get micromanaged to this degree?!? uh.....ok

Junior and I went to a ASA (now USA Softball) weekend school a few years back to be qualified for National Tournaments (we went for Mark's sake not mine). Naturally as baseball umpires who also umpire softball (and I will add that when we are umpiring softball we do it the softball way and not the baseball way) were dinged because we tracked the ball from the pitcher to the catcher without moving our head. When the school was over, one of the evaluators came over to us and said not to worry about the eyes only as opposed to head only movement. All he cared about was did the PU get the pitch correct. Go figure!

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