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Everything else is up to the TD.
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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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As already stated, locally we are told the clock does not stop for anything other than field maintenance or an inury that requires additional medical attention and the player cannot be removed from the field. We get coaches all the time that will come out and want to argue a call at length and want the clock stopped.
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I'll stop it on injury only if we need external help (medical personnel, etc). I would conceivably stop it on injury if I thought they were milking clock, but this has never actually come up. And of course... no one has mentioned rain, probably because it's obvious.
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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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In just 3 responses, (and how they varied). there appears to be a need for this to be address (and published) by the National Staff at the very least in the umpire manual. As a group, there seems to be a lack of consistency here.
and I am not really referring to 'stalling techniques', as when one introduces a clock to a game that was designed to be untimed, then inevitable will happen. We don't criticize the QB for minimizing offensive plays late in game by milking the play clock (for example). That being said, why should I (as the plate umpire) be concerned with a batter (or pitcher) maximizing time in-between pitches (as long as there is no violation)? But when does an 'injury' become long enough to stop the clock? or What about calling the UIC to the field for a protest? (some may only take a moment, others longer. there just seems to be a need for a guideline (much like we have in the 'lightning/weather guidelines). |
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The lack of uniformity on clock stopping issues has always bugged me.
It's even led to a few arguments on the field, with coaches pleading to either stop the clock or keep it running, depending on whichever is most advantageous to them at the moment. And when it comes up, you get the inevitable "but another umpire told us...", or, "that's not what they said in our other game...". I've had different umpires try to tell me that "you always have to stop the clock for (fill in the blank)". I've had others tell me that you never stop it. I've had umpires from both camps try to back up what they're saying with "it's in the rule book" (no, it's not). Until somebody comes up with a uniform set of guidelines, how and when to stop the clock will never be enforced uniformly. It will remain a troublesome "point not covered by the rules", subject to the whim of each individual umpire under the umbrella of Rule 10. |
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The clock is the TD's problem though the umpire is the enforcer on the field.
Personally, I'm all for limit plus one which ends all the BS, period.
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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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Why do we need uniformity through some sort of guidelines in the book? Umpires already vary in their judgments when it comes to rain, cold, darkness, etc. Some umpires will stop the game the moment it starts to rain, and others will keep playing until there are actual puddles on the field.
If ASA were to try to come up with certain standardized guidelines, that would open the door for abuse, IMHO. Suppose the book says "In timed games, clocks should stop when an injury requires intervention by emergency personnel." Don't you think head coaches are going to force the umpire's hand by demanding a trainer come onto the field to tend to a runner who suddenly "hurt" her ankle while sliding? I don't have a problem leaving it up to the umpire to decide, through his/her game management skills, when time should and should not stop.
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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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USFA has a rule I like (perhaps the only one, actually) that if a coach (either coach) calls a conference in the last 5 minutes of the game, the clock stops. Before they did this, it seems every coach would use his maximum number of conferences when it helped to do so - causing no end of grumbles and bad feelings on the other side. That's not softball. Now, with the rule - no one calls a late conference unless they actually need a late conference. Last tourney of 13 games, I stopped the clock exactly once for this.
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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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In well over two thousand games......I think I have stopped the clock 4-5 times. Many others due to weather....but that is a different thread. All of them involved broken bones. The judgement is ours.....just like a banger at 1st base. I am damn sure not stopping the clock for any of the following..... ...Routine injury ...Player substitution ...Player needing to tie her shoes* ...Legal time out ...Coach questioning a call ...Kid having to go to the bathroom *If I think a coach is calling time to stall by having a player tie their shoes......I tell all the players to check their shoes.....no more time outs given after then. Joel |
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