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once i became aware of the situation, i tried to pull my partner aside, towards the middle of the field, but his first reaction was to get the TD involved, i immediately voiced my objection... at one point in time, seeing my partners 'inability' to control the situation, i gave a ruling, but my partner and TD did not want to oblige at that point in time. |
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just for the record
There are a few tournaments that I have worked that clearly state that protests are decided by the TD. That being said, they usually consult with the UIC, however if the UIC is not available, its the TDs decision.
Personally, once its out of my hands,(protest has been placed), I really don't care what the decision..... It's a chain of command thing. Also, short of being physically attacked, I can't imagine ever walking off a field. Maybe I wouldn't accept anymore assignments from those guys, but I wouldn't even think of walking off. |
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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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just going to an extreme, would you want to be part of a game where the decision was so egregious that its insulting to anyone affiliated with the game? what if the UIC decided he was going to eject not only the batter who was due up but also the 3 previous male batters, and not allow any subs to take their place, thus the team has to play with 6 fielders and 4 'auto outs'? or to an even more unrealistic extreme, what if the UIC said anytime a minority was due up, they are ejected? thats certainly something i hope no one wants to be a part of. so technically there is a scenario in which you would leave the field, we just differ on where that line is. if players are held accountable for "making a travesty of the game" then so should umpires. having some time to reflect, while i was definitely upset at the decision the UIC tried to render, which probably was the result of being misinformed of the situation, i was more upset at the process of coming to the decision. just to recap, how can someone be punished for something they havent done yet, this isnt the minority report? how can one umpire be unwilling to talk to his partner first before involving other parties? how can a TD make a decision on an appeal? how can the UIC leave? how can my correct rules interpretation be completely ignored? how can the teams solution to the problem being ignored by the PU and TD? how can the UIC invoke a rule that doesnt exist and then forbid a substitution rule that does exist? how can this whole fiasco last ~30 minutes? |
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jr - even in the ridiculous extremes (which you must admit were WAY beyond what actually happened to you), finish the game, go home, don't work for the guy again. Eventually he'll chase everyone off and have no one to work for him, or will piss off enough TD's or HS's that no one asks him to schedule their games for them. In your case, you should have never gotten anywhere near thinking of walking off - and your insistence that you were right to do so tells me you might get there again. Don't. That gets around - and regardless of circumstance, I'd be reluctant to schedule someone that left the field mid-game because they didn't like what was going on ... EVEN if they were right.
That said... you say there was no protest. Why were you talking to ANYONE not on the field then? You guys need to work on protocol. First - YOU should have never let a 2nd coach anywhere near the discussion. Second - after PU talked to coach, he should have either made a ruling and moved on (ON HIS OWN) or talked with you and the two of you make a ruling and move on. If a coach doesn't like it, he has the magic word to use and THEN you bring in external help - don't EVER EVER EVER do it on your own. If he doesn't use the magic word, play ball.
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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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Dave I haven't decided if I should call it from the dugout or the outfield. Apparently, both have really great views! Screw green, it ain't easy being blue! I won't be coming here that much anymore. I might check in now and again. |
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i admit i should have stopped the OC from approaching the PU. but the PU wanted to involve the TD right away instead of first discussing the situation with me. one of the reasons why the assn wanted me, among other ASA umps, involved is bc their umps arent very good. my partner that day had already blown a few rule interpretation calls and quite frankly i dont think he knew how to remotely rule on this situation, which probably was his rationale for immediately involving the TD. hes good at making judgment calls, just not as good with rules as he could be. but all in all, i appreciate the discussion. if i knew i was 100% correct in my threatened actions, i wouldnt have posted for others to critique. while i can see how one would read this and think i was insistent that i was right, heres what pretty much verbatim what i told the PU and TD after the TD pulled some ruling out of his *ss, the 4th male batter has not come to bat yet, correct? there is no rule saying a female cant sub for a male, correct? if the team subs a female in for the male thats due up, there wont be 4 male batters in a row, correct? so why are we punishing an action that hasnt occurred yet? even after agreeing with me on those questions, another ruling was going to be invoked. then after the UIC was conferred with an offered his ruling, the OC asked me if that was a rule, i replied there is no rule that calls for the ejection of the batter due up, and furthermore there is no rule saying once a player is ejected, the team has to play with 9 on defense and an 'auto out' on offense. once the PU said thats what the UIC wants, i told him, if thats whats going to occur, theres no need for me to be here and i will leave. to me, its not a matter of me being right, its a matter of the integrity of the game being right. |
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You're also taking away every ounce of authority that he had left. You might as well announce, "this umpire is clueless, and he needs me, the veteran, to fix everything for him." Don't do that. Teams listen to and respect our calls because we make them believable. They need to trust that each umpire knows what s/he should call, even if s/he doesn't. They need that believability. Swooping in to help a rookie umpire without him asking you for your opinion takes all that away. Next time, put a sign on his back that says "Student Umpire" like we do with high school kids taking driver's ed. I'm 34 years old, so I know people look at me as a "young umpire," despite the fact I've been calling games for 19 years. I had a partner try to pull that crap on me at a National a few years ago, specifically coming to talk to me about a call I'd just made in order to "make sure" I got it right. After the game, I made it clear that in no uncertain terms was he to never pull that s*** on me again. It comes off as "rescuing" a lesser umpire, and I wasn't going to effing having that. Quote:
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Dave I haven't decided if I should call it from the dugout or the outfield. Apparently, both have really great views! Screw green, it ain't easy being blue! I won't be coming here that much anymore. I might check in now and again. |
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