
oh, and Kershaw appeared to hurt his oblique on a throw to 1B the next half inn.


Wow.RoundTrippers wrote:seriously?? this ump is a professional?? i know we all make mistakes but REALLY?? horrible. he should be on the unemployment line. lets not forget where the ump stands at first...if nothing else he was out of position, i know i know...union will never get rid of him...horrible. its like me making a burrito when a pizza was ordered
I’ve never really been a proponent of instant replay, and I don’t know what the game situation was when this call happened, but a bad call like that does have me wanting to change my mind.Hells Satans wrote:
could have gone either way
RoundTrippers wrote:lets just say with your philosophy i wouldnt want to eat in your restaurant. i have standards! that call does not pass my standards and you ok with it right?? i have had 18 straight months of increased revenue, i must be doing something right! maybe its my standards!
The ump was perfectly positioned not to see Helton's leg was off the bag. His second mistake was assuming Todd Helton is 11 feet tall. Still, this could happen everyday in baseball and I wouldn't want instant replay - just better umpires.PGromek wrote:"In baseball, a neighborhood play is a force play where a fielder receiving the ball in attempting to force out a runner at second base, catches and quickly throws the ball to first base in a double play attempt without actually touching second base, or by touching second base well before catching the ball. By every rules code, such a play is not an out, because to record a force out, the fielder with the ball must actually touch a force base before the forced runner arrives (pro Rule 7.08(e)). In professional baseball, the umpires frequently call the play as an out, disregarding the strict application of the rule in favor of traditional practice."
1st basemen are finally getting the same respect from umps
lol kj, too funny!KJ Duke wrote:The ump was perfectly positioned not to see Helton's leg was off the bag. His second mistake was assuming Todd Helton is 11 feet tall. Still, this could happen everyday in baseball and I wouldn't want instant replay - just better umpires.PGromek wrote:"In baseball, a neighborhood play is a force play where a fielder receiving the ball in attempting to force out a runner at second base, catches and quickly throws the ball to first base in a double play attempt without actually touching second base, or by touching second base well before catching the ball. By every rules code, such a play is not an out, because to record a force out, the fielder with the ball must actually touch a force base before the forced runner arrives (pro Rule 7.08(e)). In professional baseball, the umpires frequently call the play as an out, disregarding the strict application of the rule in favor of traditional practice."
1st basemen are finally getting the same respect from umps
If I order Mr. P's, the delivery guy better not bring me Taco Bell! Yeah, I'd can the slacker too.
This brutal blown call and this comment has provided me the perfect opportunity to unleash some thoughts about MLB umpiring that has been stirring in me for quite some time.Atlas wrote:But where are the other umps? The home plate ump couldn't see this and sort of call a quick conference and say "Hey Tim, you're not gonna wanna see this one on sports center tonight." ??
Now, at age 38, Brian Runge has been run out of the game of baseball for failing multiple drug tests. The drug(s) of choice were not revealed, but I would suspect drugs of the recreational variety. Looks like he couldn't stop partying. A lot of sadness everywhere over this, I'm sure.COZ wrote:[ To all of us who had just spent 6 weeks thinking we were competing based upon merit, it was clear it was based upon who you know, not how well you umpired. That was the talk amongst all of us at the school. Brian Runge ranked #1? The guy who was consistently late/hungover/red eyes to drills? Yup, the guy who called Phillip Humber's perfect game. To this day, one guy from our class has made it to the Major Leagues, Brian Runge, though the fix was in from Day 1. And people wonder why MLB Umpiring sucks, I offer the two examples above as to two reasons why! So Tim Welke's call was not just a "mistake," to me, it is but an obvious end result of a flawed patronage system.
COZ