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Not calling "Foul ball"
My local chapters have in the past few years have stressed not throwing the hands up and calling "foul ball" on the obvious foul balls. If there is a question or its close then obviously call it via the proper mechanics ... but for those obviously out of play fouls ball what are your chapters having you do?
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If there are runners moving or a player heading for a fence, I'll make sure they hear it no matter how obvious it is to me. Just because I think it's obvious doesn't mean others agree. If there is no one on and I think of it on a ball way out of the park, I may just be reaching for a ball. I just don't think an umpire calling a foul batted ball foul is that big a deal. |
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glen _______________________________ "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." --Mark Twain. |
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Why call the obvious? The ball comes off the bat straight over the backstop and you are throwing up the hands and yelling FOUL or FOUL BALL? A pulled ball ricochets off the dugout and you need to announce it?
You don't verbalize a swinging strike; you don't sound off on routine and very obvious outs at 1B. Do you call out SAFE every time a runner touches home if there is no play there? Why change simply because it is a obvious foul ball? WMB |
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What is obvious to an umpire may not be obvious to the players and coaches. I believe at certain levels it also creates an amount of assumption and laziness. The umpire "believes" it is obvious a ball is leaving play, reaches in the bag for another ball and all of a sudden, the RF snags the fly ball the umpire "thought" was obvoiusly leaving the field of play. As previously noted, WHY is this such a big deal to some people? What harm does it cause to the game? Other than another official, does anyone even notice the call is being made on an obvious foul ball? If an umpire doesn't call a ball 50' out of play "foul", I'm not going to worry about it, just as I won't worry about it if s/he does. Voice inflection and showboating aside, I don't see any problem here. |
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All the rest, I will agree with Mike on.
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glen _______________________________ "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." --Mark Twain. |
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I'm a slow-pitch guy. I call foul ball on EVERYTHING because EVERYONE runs on EVERY hit.
I had a older umpire who does fast-pitch working with me in the open league (the big B and C boys who hit homeruns as if they were singles) tell me anything that goes out of play doesn't need to be verbalized. I said, if I don't verbalize, and Big John there goes flying from 1st to 3rd and is standing on 3rd and sees me telling him to go back to 1st, I hope YOU'RE ready to explain to him why I didn't verbalize it. He said if Big John has a problem with a little thing like that, he won't be finishing the game. I had to ask, how many open league games have you worked? He said this was his first night, since they needed help and the fast-pitch games were covered. My face was blank, but my mind said "good luck". I know you all are going to razz me over what I just said, but I just had to vent it. |
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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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![]() My USSSA state UIC told me to yell "foul ball". Rationale: so the players would know the ball went foul, and not to confuse the players with the words foul and out, which may sound the same from a distance. ![]() The ASA state UIC said I could yell either one. Rationale: who the hell cares about the players, your mechanics are more important. ![]() |
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We see with our eyes. Fans and parents see with their hearts. |
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My group does not want the obvious foul balls verbalized or signaled. Now the questions becomes.... define "obvious".
If I remember correctly, NCAA umpire training tried to instill this philosophy a few years ago...don't signal or call the obvious foul balls. What they found was that the definition of "obvious" varied greatly from umpire to umpire. Coaches were complaining that balls that landed a foot outside the foul lines were not being called or signaled. Again, if I remember correctly, the NCAA umpires manual had to put some verbiage in something like..."any ball that lands within approx four feet of a foul line on either side must be signaled if fair and signaled and verbalized if foul." So it may be to your benefit to have your group provide some guidelines around what is considered an "obvious" foul ball. Remember...common sense isn't.....
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It's what you learn after you think you know it all that's important! |
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In NCAA softball, umpires are to take a secondary role to the coaches. The coaches control every aspect of the game, other than judgment and rule applications (although, many or most try to control that, too). Umpires are not to presume to tell players that a ball is foul, or communicate with a player in any way that isn't a required call or signal; because the coaches are the only people allowed to communicate with the players directly. And, if it is obvious, umpires shouldn't presume that the coach is unaware of the obvious. The result is that players often run and slide unnecessarily, but that is what the NCAA coaches want; total control, with subservient umpires. In most associations, the NCAA umpires are (obviously) the best, the officers, the trainers, or, at least, the role models. This specific example of NCAA mechanics is often NOT what is best at high school or rec levels; the caliber of players, coaches, and umpires does not lend itself to the same philosophy. These players and coaches need for umpires to be more vocal, more demonstrative, and to protect them from themselves, even. "Obvious" obviously changes with the level of play. As one who does NCAA, I know I now signal and vocalize less often in other levels of softball; but I do communicate whenever I think I should to benefit the players and coaches. I know it makes it harder to remember to NOT do it in NCAA, or when being evaluated, but I try to find a middle ground based on the level of ball I am doing.
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Steve ASA/ISF/NCAA/NFHS/PGF Last edited by AtlUmpSteve; Thu Oct 18, 2007 at 11:47am. |
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Even though it sometimes feels as if it is, officiating is not our fulltime job. There are many officials which have job and family commitments that prohibit them from working NCAA ball, just as it does working HS ball in some areas. That does not make them any less an umpire. I have some very good umpires in my area. Some work NCAA, some do not. Some who work NCAA place themselves above the rest, and others will move from NCAA to pro to international to co-rec SP to HS FP to JO tournament and back to NCAA within a week. To me, the latter is the role model. And being a good umpire does not lock you into a place with NCAA ball. A great part of getting decent assignments, if any at all, is an umpire's ability to interact with the coaches along the way. Sometimes, it isn't that easy and right or wrong, some assignors will take their marching orders from the conferences/schools which pay them or someone else may be getting those calls the following year. These folks have one of the hardest jobs to do as it is a very thin line they must walk. Sorry, didn't mean to get carried away. Steve makes some good points, just wanted to add a little clarification. |
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