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Please show me the rule stating that. I hear this over and over again from officials and yet there is no rule saying anything of the sort. The head coach is ultimately responsible for the actions of their coaching staff, but there is no rule saying only the head coach may interact with the officials.
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Since you hear this over and over again perhaps this should have sunk in by now. If you guys want to take crap from an assistant coach or a score keeper be my guest. I suppose you also allow assistants at your pre game plate conference? Last edited by MT 73; Sun Jun 04, 2017 at 09:32am. |
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Why wouldnt I allow any coach that wants to attend the pregame conference to present. In fact, if you read the NFHS umpires manual regarding the pregame conference it says any coach who wishes to attend may do so. The only requirement in NFHS is that the head coach must be present.
And no, nothing needs to sink in. Just because numerous officials have a superiority complex saying they wont talk to anyone but the head coach regardless of it not being in the rule book does not make it proper or accepted it merely makes it one of those myths perpetuated by officials, much like the numerous rule myths passed on year after year by unknowing parents and coaches. By your train of thought, head coach at 3rd base, assistant coach at 1st and a pulled foot on a close play at 1st base. You would require the assistant coach to go to the head coach, tell them what they say and then have the head coach go to the calling official to ask for assistance on the call. Or, how about a situation that involves some obscure rule. The assistant coach knows the rule but the head coach does not. Again, you are going to require the assistant coach to go to the head coach, and then the head coach to come to the officials. Then, if there is further question on the rule, the head coach must run back and forth between their assistant and the umpires in order to discuss the situation because "assistants should be seen and not heard"? There is absolutely nothing in writing anywhere saying only the head coach may interact with the officials. As Irish just said, anyone who claims so is being beyond overly officious. |
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A team hires a pitching coach, because the head coach knows little to nothing about pitching. An umpire (doesn't matter which) calls an illegal pitch; the team sends out a representative asking for clarification of the call made.
Personally, I WANT to talk to the pitching coach, who is more likely to understand what it is I'm saying, so the pitcher can fix it and I won't have to keep calling the same violation. MT 73, you have been taught and practice the baseball philosophy intended to promote a chain of command to manage the game. That isn't the prevailing softball philosophy; in collegiate games, you will lose conference assignments and be dropped off conference staffs if you practice that at that level. Even if you survive, that current assistant will be a head coach some day, and will remember you as the umpire that treated her like dirt.
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Steve ASA/ISF/NCAA/NFHS/PGF |
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I keep assistant coaches on a short leash.
If they ask in a respectful manner I will respond likewise. If they get in my face to argue, or start making snide comments I will call time and inform the head coach to get the offender in line. After that I inform the offender to knock it off or face an ejection. Which, BTW, I have never had to do since by that time they get it. I do not do college nor NHFS so if being warm and fuzzy is necessary on the road to advancement then I wish you all the best of luck. BTW-- I coached high level travel ball for years and if one of my assistants tried to argue a call I would have fired him in a NY minute. I also told my parents that if they ever got into it with an umpire their daughter would be benched for the rest of the game. Youth sports would be a lot more enjoyable for all if head coaches would take better charge of everyone-- coaches, assistants, parents and players. Last edited by MT 73; Sun Jun 04, 2017 at 04:50pm. |
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No where of which I am aware
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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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If as a coach you refused to accept this or ANY other of my directions you would be dumped and reported. Last edited by MT 73; Sun Jun 04, 2017 at 06:10pm. |
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If I recall correctly, New York HS doesn't play under Fed rules. EsqUmp or someone else closer to knowing how that works could explain further.
Edit - Aw crap I am replying to a page 1 comment on Page 2. Ignore me. Edit 2: Ah hell, I will chime in. One of the organizations I work for has a semi-unwritten rule of "Assistants are to be seen and not heard." By semi-unwritten, I mean those words have come out of the rep's mouth at the umpire meeting, but you won't see it in any rulebook or manual. I have also heard, on several occasions, from good umpires: "Why were you discussing it with an assistant coach?" IMO, assistants are team personnel and they are free to talk to me. They get a little more rope than a player, and a lot less than the HC.
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Powder blue since 1998. Longtime forum lurker. Umpiring Goals: Call the knee strike accurately (getting the low pitch since 2017)/NCAA D1 postseason/ISF-WBSC Certification/Nat'l Indicator Fraternity(completed) "I'm gonna call it ASA for the foreseeable future. You all know what I mean." Last edited by teebob21; Tue Jun 06, 2017 at 08:33pm. |
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Lets not get any testier or negatively personal.
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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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Tom |
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In ASA/USA, the book specifically states that a coach is there to represent their team. No specific coach, any coach even a player/coach. How can a coach represent the team and players if the umpire refuses to entertain any questions or discussion?
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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 wonder why? It is true that by rule only the team's head coach can verify the lineup card, acknowledge that his/her players are properly and legally equipped, and that players and equipment are in compliance with NFHS rules. But that doesn't mean an assistant coach cannot attend the plate conference with the head coach. Does your association find something improper with assistant coaches attending the conference? Some of those assistants are going to be head coaches at some point, so why not let them attend and learn?
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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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And in 6 years of umpiring NYC HS I have never had an assistant coach even try to come out for a conference. Heck, 70% of the teams do not even have an assistant coach. To repeat, I wil not just remain mute if a coach has a legitimate question or seeks a ruling in a respectful manner. And if an assistant coach is on first base and claims that F3 was off the bag I will react s if the manager made such a request. But I will NOT give the same leeway to an assistant as I would to the head coach because they are not in charge of the team. The only time that I ejected an assistant ( it was during the summer travel season) was when a scorekeeper came out to question a tag play. After I explained to him the runner got under the tag he rolled his eyes and tossed his clipboard into the air. I waited until he picked it up and then tossed him. Last edited by MT 73; Mon Jun 05, 2017 at 12:12am. |
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