In an earlier post this spring, I predicted that the expanded use of instant replay will show just how accurate major league umpires are. MLB's own analysis of last season seems to support this as there were 377 wrong calls in 2,431 games, or about 1 every 6.4 games - not bad if you ask me. I also promised that when the first call was overturned, there would be a logical explanation and that I would write about it, so a deal is a deal...
Monday, March 31, 2014
Friday, March 28, 2014
Opening Day - What does it mean to you? Is baseball still our national pastime?
“The game
begins in the spring, when everything else begins again…” A. Bart Giamatti
Opening day
of the major league baseball season is unlike any other. I’m not going to get all schmoopy on you, but
if you’re a baseball fan, you know what that means. Sure, everyone is tied for first place and
this could be the year, but beyond that, your oldest best buddy is back in town
for six months and just like that, everybody is young, good looking and flush
with cash - "déjà vu all over again," only new. I’ve made the brief argument before that baseball is still going strong
as our national pastime – “in all its forms it tickles each of the sense…seeping
into our lore and leisure” - but you could write an entire book exploring that argument. Baseball is an old game, but it seems to find new ways to get
under our skin. Let’s take a quick look
at baseball in modern times.Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Umpire drilled by line drive, what they didn't tell you.
It might have been St. Patrick's Day but MLB umpire Brad Myers was anything but lucky on Monday when he couldn't avoid a line drive off the bat of The Reds Brandon Phillips during a spring training game. The painful-to-watch video, currently making the rounds, shows Myers was in a dangerous position with a right handed batter up so let me explain a few things that were left out of most national reports of the mishap.
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
Baseball Lessons - Something Happened...
Something happened Sunday in a game I umpired that I wasn't quite prepared for. It had nothing to do with baseball and in another way, it had everything to do with baseball. You see, on Sundays I have the honor and pleasure of working a very special amateur baseball league that plays its games in an unbelievably beautiful setting on Coronado Island in San Diego, on a gem of a field on a quarter-mile wide sandy strip of land known as The Silver Strand. It’s an age 55 and over senior league, but frankly most players are 60+ and many well into their 70s. The quality of play is no different than any amateur league in that in the end, the team that doesn't beat itself usually comes out ahead - of course! The guys take the game seriously, but there's also no doubt they're all well aware that the outcome is not as important as the gift of still being able to play baseball from the neck up the way they always have. What time has chiseled away from their athleticism, the heart has recompensed. Sore limbs and aching muscles are usually no match for the will to hit, field, throw, slide, and yes, even dive for the baseball on occasion. But sometimes, too much is just too much, as it was on Sunday. While working on a shutout in the 4th inning, after firing a strike, the pitcher took a woozy step off the mound, went down to a knee and collapsed. After the immediate attention from a few players with medical training and the extended efforts of the quick-to-arrive paramedics, about thirty minutes later, the gentleman was pronounced dead right there on the field. A life ended at age 57 on a pristine summer-like March day, under blue sky, the sailboats silently dotting the harbor beyond left field, teammates and opponents silently milling about the field.
Shortly after the reality of the situation was apparent, players from both teams joined in a circle for the impromptu memorial and it didn't take long for the sentiment to surface that the deceased died doing what he loved, and we should all be so lucky to go that way when our time comes. I suppose medical professionals see these dramas everyday but for me, it was sad, shocking and surreal to see a guy playing baseball one minute and lying lifeless in the next. You often hear stories about how life is precious, which I think we all know on one level, but on another, our awareness is dominated by the more practical matters that compete for our utmost attention. Indeed, it isn't easy to maintain balance and keep everything in perspective. No, we can’t enjoy every moment, but we certainly should try to and, more than that, find the time to follow our passions any way we can. The thing that happened Sunday had nothing to do with baseball, but in some way, it had everything to do with it.
Please say a quick prayer for the pitcher, try to notice the beauty in each day, and if you're ever visiting San Diego, stop by The Strand on Sunday and catch a few innings of some old-school baseball.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
What's not wrong with this picture? Mattingly did what?
Oh boy, is this instant replay stuff a ton of fun in the first few days of spring training! Today's adventure involves a would-be inside the park home run and a close play at the plate prompting Angel manager Mike Scioscia to call for replay review.Take a look at the play HERE.
Tuesday, March 4, 2014
Quick hit - Beer Goggles 0 for 3 in Instant Replay Debut
MLB history was made as the new instant replay
system was put to the test in spring training games in Florida and Arizona. The
first day yielded three challenges and I’m here to tell you that in all three
cases, the calls on the field survived the video review by the desk-blue inside MLB’s
NYC headquarters. As an amateur umpire,
I’m not surprised the pros went 3 for 3, but I’m also not about to gloat. Professional umpires are not perfect; they all make mistakes on occasion, but
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Here Comes the Future - Stats 3.0. - Baseball's Dark Matter
Dark matter is the stuff in the universe we can't see but, because of its apparent gravitational force on everything we can see, we assume it exists and that it influences everything. As science advances, the deeper we can peer into the structure of the universe, the more we learn about how it really works. Quick leap - the same is true in baseball. Some people think the game is slow and that's because either they aren't aware of or simply don't appreciate everything that goes on in the spaces in between the action. This is the stuff we can talk Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Sabremetrics 101 - No, Really!
I consider myself a student of baseball, but I can't really say I understand all that much about Sabremetrics. Sure, I know that's what the book "Moneyball" was all about and that in the movie version, Jonah Hill's fictional-Yale-educated-sidekick helped support Brad Pitt's real-life-Stanford-educated Billy Beane in his effort to construct a 103-win Oakland A's team in 2002 based on some funky stats...and well, that's what Sabremetrics is, the use of mathematical tools to analyze baseball.
Monday, February 24, 2014
Trick Play Call-to-Arms! Know your balks...
Trick plays in baseball can be a thing of beauty or “bush league,” beautiful to the perpetrators, bush league to the guys who were fooled. The old hidden-ball-trick is genius in its simplicity and fair enough because there shouldn't be any sympathy for anyone not keeping an eye on the ball, but when the misdirection becomes overly theatrical, its fair to say a line's been crossed. I've seen some surprisingly well rehearsed gadgets at the high school level here in San Diego, like the fake
Thursday, February 13, 2014
"A" is NOT for Abner. The Doubleday Doubletake...
In my last post, I giant
slalomed through the gates of rule book logic to debunk the old saying that “the
tie goes to the runner.” Although we know the rule book is a living breathing thing which keeps evolving, like with last year's change outlawing the old third-to-first spaghetti move, when you look at the proverbial forest through the trees, the rules make sense most of the time - much of which goes back to the original Kickerbocker Rules of the mid-nineteenth century. As we salivate in anticipation of spring training games so we can again focus on the action, I thought it
would be a good time to take a look back and tell you about another surprising myth about baseball.
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
“Tie Goes to the Runner” Myth - Like Santa, it does and doesn't exist!
Who hasn’t
heard someone yell “tie goes to the runner” after a close play at first? Of course that plea is just another example
of a fan grasping at the nearest cliché to rationalize a favorable outcome for
his or her team, the offense. It’s a complex discussion to talk about all the factors that influence the call when it’s so close to the naked eye it can go either way, but what of baseball’s rule
book? Since I’m in a debunking mood,
let’s see what the rules say about TGTTR.
Before I
start dissecting words, we need to remind ourselves of some of baseball’s
inalienable truths.
Thursday, January 30, 2014
MLB approves pitcher headgear - Duh! Now let's strip hitters...
Give me all your fearless X-gamers, base jumpers and
assorted adrenaline junkies inventing new ways to get hurt and there is still
no more dangerous and nerve-wracking job than pitching a baseball with the suppressed
reality that in an unexpected instant, you might not be able to prevent a liner from hitting your skull at 100+ mph.
It’s amazing Tampa Bay pitcher Alex Cobb came back last year to go 5-1
down the stretch after being hit in the head by a line drive in a June 15th game
versus the Royals. He "only" suffered a
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