RFDC wrote:
Speaking of umpiring games, I saw something last night I have never saw. Right before the game started the umpire walked to the fence where a large group of fans were sitting and asked for their attention. He went on to tell them that he understood he was going to make calls that they did not agree with. He was going to make some good calls and some bad calls. He asked them to lay off him and in between innings he would come back to the fence and would take any questions from anyone on a specific call and he would explain what he saw while he got a drink. But if anyone could not abide by this and went about riding him he was going to have a low tolerance and would just send them to their vehicle. It really seemed to catch people off guard and had them watching what they were saying. The night went pretty well and he even explained a couple things at the fence that people had some issues with.
I don't ride the umps as it serves no purpose. But I have had several umps come up to us along the first base line. One time I asked him about rule in between innings because I did not understand the call, and he politely explained it to me. Most of them are pretty cool and just want to be around the sport.
One thing I have never understood after nearly a decade of watching youth baseball and softball is the way home plate umpires tend to squeeze pitchers. Consider these observations:
1) Kids are much smaller than adults, obviously, and so their strike zones can be tiny by professional standards. Most leagues adjust for this by being generous with the high strike and usually giving some leeway on both corners. And yet, I consistently see umps squeeze in several of those places, which makes no sense.
2) When umps call a decent zone in the first inning, the game moves much faster because kids (and with the coaches' encouragement) tend to swing at stuff near the zone. If they do not, then the coaches tell the kids to just stand there and take pitches.
3) Some coaches are trying to work the on base percentage angle in youth sports. While in the short term, you will get more base runners and beat bad teams, they neglect the bigger focus on teaching kids how to hit a ball. When kids are told to not swing until they have a strike on them, they tend to have trouble getting the bat off their shoulders.