So You Want to be an Umpire?

DBM asked a question about umpires the other day and more specifically about their training. Philjones provided a good answer to her question and I hope he doesn’t mind that I have drawn an article out of the archives to meet my weekly commitment. It confirms what pj wrote and adds a little detail.

I wrote the article a few years ago in 2013 and have tried to update what I could find. I wrote it because of the interest I had in umpires  and how they got to be umpires. It does not take a side in umpires vs electronic umpiring but does highlight what they go through to become umpires. Becoming a MLB umpire is a long shot just as becoming a MLB player is a long shot.

The players take the field, the stadium sound system declares “Play Ball!” or better still, “It’s time for Dodger baseball.” The fans settle down into their chosen seats in anticipation of the game that is to unfurl. The pitcher takes his warm up pitches while they are being counted as only eight are allowed. That count is taken by one of the four “men in blue”- the umpires – who will regulate and officiate the game.

During the game they will keep things moving and including balls and strikes they will make 300 to 400 decisions, perhaps more. While they are making those decisions to the best of their ability there are other umpiring crews at work including thousands of home town fans, fifty players plus their coaches and managers and a home audience of unknown count. There is little wonder that we hear fans shouting, “You’re missing a good game!” or “Want to borrow my glasses!” and sometimes epithets that cannot make it to the print media but are picked up through televised games.

It causes one to wonder how these men become umpires. Perhaps the better question would be why they even want to become umpires. They follow a grueling schedule with perhaps no series in their home towns, living away from home all during the season with constant travel and quite often a daily barrage from players and fans alike.

The life of a MLB umpire is certainly no picnic nor is the path to their location behind the plate or on the bases at Dodger Stadium or some other MLB venue. They are paid well for their services and their union – the World Umpires Association – tends to their labor negotiations and deals with any labor disputes. The starting pay for a rookie umpire is $120,000 with senior umpires earning upwards of $350,000 while the most senior MLB umpires can earn about $400,000. They receive a $340 per diem to cover hotels and food. MLB umpires receive four weeks of paid vacation and both the National League and the American League fly them first class to their next game sites. They do earn extra pay for All-Star games and play-off games.

Baseball Reference’s Maurice Moton wrote about NFL referees on May 3, 2018, noting the average salaries of officials in the four major team sports as follows:

  • NFL: $188,322    16 games
  • NHL: $212,500    82 games
  • MLB: $235,000   162 games
  • NBA: $375,000     82 games

Major league umpires, as with players, follow their dream of umpiring at the highest level in the game, a dream that somehow got started in their youth at the lowest of levels. The question is often asked how one becomes a MLB umpire. That is, how do you become one of the 76 men in blue at the MLB level? Christie Cowles is an Editor/Producer for MLB.com. She outlines a five step program on becoming an umpire:

1. Enroll in one of two umpiring schools approved by MLB. The best known school for many fans is the Harry Wendelstedt School for Umpires. The courses run for five weeks, usually in January and February.

2. Get noticed: Instructors look for many characteristics other than knowledge of baseball rules when evaluating potential umpires. MLB Director of Umpire Administration Tom Lepperd states

“Confidence, a strong presence on the field, knowledge of the mechanics — where to go when the ball is hit, forceful calls, good use of voice, hustle and ability to handle situations on the field (are all important).” 

Former PBUC Director Mike Fitzpatrick adds that good judgment and character are things instructors look for as well.

3. Finish top of the class: In 2011 top 16 percent of all umpire school enrollees were selected to begin umpiring careers.

4. Begin assignment in lower leagues

5. Wait for ‘The Call’: Altogether there are 76 umpires in the Majors comprised of 19 teams, and 225 in the minor leagues so with the low turnover there are very few openings.

The newest umpiring school – The Minor League Baseball Umpire Training Academy-  is located at the Historic Dodgertown sports facility in Vero Beach, Florida.) opened its doors in 2012 at the Vero Beach Sports Complex, which will always be known as ‘Dodgertown’ to longtime Dodger fans as it was the spring training home of the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers from 1948 through 2008. The Umpire Academy has quickly gained a reputation for being one of the best (if not the best) umpire schools and is now a top source for minor league umpires.

https://www.tcpalm.com/story/sports/mlb/2017/01/13/umpire-training-taking-place-historic-dodgertown/96559922/

The life of a minor league umpire pretty much mirrors the life of a minor league baseball player. In 2013, Baseball America estimated that 17.2 percent of drafted players — about one in six — will make it to the Major League level. For umpires, it’s only a three percent chance.

They too have to move from level to level and are employed for only three to five months during the season meaning most have an off-season jobs.

The 2019 regular season salary range for each classification was as follows:

  • Class AAA: $2,900 – 3,900 per month
  • Class AA: $2,500 – 3,100 per month
  • Class A – Full Season: $2,100 – 2,600 per month
  • Class A – Short Season & Rookie: $2,000 – 2,300 per month

Per Diems:

  • AAA: $58-66 daily
  • AA: $50-58 daily
  • A: $44.50-52.50 daily

Once his career begins a minor league umpire faces an almost impossible task of realizing his dream. The vast majority of umpires working within the various professional baseball leagues below MLB never make it to the majors. The attrition rate at the MLB level is about one per year, making one opening for a Triple A umpire a year, to claim a permanent job at that level. According to MLB Director of Umpire Administration Tom Lepperd, it takes usually seven to 10 years in the minor leagues before an umpire gets to the Majors. That’s twice the amount of time it normally takes a ballplayer to make his way through the ranks. When a student is fortunate enough to be recommended for a job, he begins his professional umpiring career at the bottom of baseball’s hierarchy in either rookie or short-season Class A baseball. Whereas a minor league player can skip a level or levels, an umpire cannot. Baseball fans know it is almost impossible to dismiss an umpire in the major leagues, but a minor league umpire who is evaluated as no longer being a major-league prospect will be released, ending his professional career.

“We’re doing this for that three-percent chance pretty much,” said minor league umpire Cody Oakes. “As an umpire, you have to be ready for that day when you get released. It’s on the back of your mind. You just try to keep going forward and do the best you can and hope it doesn’t happen.”

Shaun Lampe, working in the AA Eastern League  back in 2013 explains some of the challenges of being a minor league umpire. Lampe points out that minor league players and umpires go through similar challenges but with one major difference. Since they don’t have a home base, as players do, umpires are constantly on the road. Instead of having 25 or more teammates to spend the season with, they have only each other, a minor league crew comprised of two to three members. The crew becomes a summer family, staying in the same hotels, often the same one occupied by the visiting team, and travels in a league owned van. Seven to eight hour drives are not uncommon. According to Lampe, 

“This year from April 3rd and September 3rd we had 11 days off, two being the All-Star Break. So on average we work three to four weeks without a day off and then we’ll have one day off.”

Lampe continued: “Just because an umpire has put in the time and done a great job doesn’t necessarily mean he will reach his goal of a big league gig.”

He has made it to the Pacific Coast League but there is no record that I can find of a MLB call-up.

Roberto Ortiz, the second member of the Lampe crew, echoed the feelings of his crew mates that he also misses his family especially because they’re so far away and can’t easily travel to see him. He is from Puerto Rico.

Ortiz became the second Puerto Rican umpire in Major League Baseball. He made it to the majors on May 16, 2016, in Washington, for a game between the Nationals and Marlins. He has shuttled between Class AAA and major-league umpiring assignments since his debut in the big leagues. He worked 70 big league games last season.

Brian  deBrauwere, a third member of Lampe’s crew, relates that being away from his family for so long is the worst part of his job. When asked about his worst moment as an umpire deBrauwere did not relate an on field incident but was quick to respond, 

“Just any random night on the road when you wish you were home and you’re laying in a hotel.” Lampe added, “Especially when you have something going on at home and you have no control, or you can’t get there.”

DeBrauwere has joined the coaching staff of Umpires Advanced United and umpires in the  independent Atlantic League.

On July 12,2019 in an independent league game deBrauwere wore an earpiece connected to an iPhone in his pocket and relayed the call upon receiving it from a TrackMan computer system that uses Doppler radar.

“Until we can trust this system 100%, I still have to go back there with the intention of getting a pitch correct because if the system fails, it doesn’t pick a pitch up or if it registers a pitch that’s a foot-and-a-half off the plate as a strike, I have to be prepared to correct that,” Mr. deBrauwere said.

Of note, on July 16,2019 the pitching coach of the High Point Rockers in the Atlantic League was ejected for arguing an electronic call. That is the same Frank Viola we remember.

How difficult is it for an aspiring umpire to make to MLB? Out of 136 students in Hunter Wendelstedt’s five-week umpire course, only 24 make the cut to even get a chance to continue. That is, after paying a tuition of $2,400.

“The odds are terrible. The odds are really, really terrible,” said Wendelstedt, who also runs the Harry Wendelstedt School for Umpires, named after his late father, also a longtime MLB umpire. “I feel like I’m Walt Disney because I’m selling a dream.”

“The crazy thing about this umpire school is that there’s one person here that will make it to the major leagues,” Wendelstedt said. “One person from this class will make it.”

The photo at the top of the article is of Kerwin Danley.  Danley and Alfonso Márquez are among the four umpires announced by the MLB in February as new crew chiefs for the 2020 season. Danley is the first African American to hold the position. Márquez is the first Mexican American in the role.

As Bear demonstrated in his article, baseball is a funny game. My favorite umpire is Ron Luciano who penned, “The Umpire Strikes Back”. Ron, who died in 1955, was the Yogi Berra of umpires.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/752538.The_Umpire_Strikes_Back

In conclusion, three umpires come into  a bar. They were discussing the problems of their occupation.

One said: “Some are balls and some are strikes and I call them as they are.”

The second said: “Some are balls and some are strikes and I call them as I see them.”

But the third umpire said: “I see them coming across, and some are balls and some are strikes, but they’re nothing until I call them.”

This article has 72 Comments

  1. I used to do umpiring, first in college, and then for summer softball leagues in New York City. This was in the early 80’s. It was mostly something I did for fun but I also got paid per game, not a lot, but as a young guy, money always helped. I learned a lot from umpiring. First, when you make a call, do it decisively. Second, if it’s a controversial call, make it decisively, and walk away before they have a chance to start yelling at you. When there was a close play at second base, I was gone before they realized it. They’d turn around, ready to argue, but I wasn’t there. Very effective technique. Third, be consistent. If you start the game with a low strike zone, keep calling it that way the whole game. That way, it’s fair and the hitters always know what to expect.

    Finally, the most important lesson: act like an authority, and people will treat you like one. The summer leagues were corporate leagues. High strung type A Wall Street types. To say that they took the games seriously was an understatement. They were friggin softball games, but this was no drink beers with your buddies kind of thing. They were hypercompetitive. I had to break up fights. And I was the only umpire on the field. One time, someone slid into second base too hard, and the two guys involved jumped up ready to fight. Before I knew it, the benches cleared and I had a near riot on my hands. I was the only umpire. I did only thing I could think of. I strode out to second base right into the middle of it. I turned to one team, and boomed, “You go back there now!” I pointed to their bench like I was about to throw them out of the game. I turned to the other team, and did the same thing. Then I immediately walked back towards home plate and yelled, “Play ball!” Amazingly, they slunk back to their benches and resumed the game. That experience taught me a lot. It doesn’t matter what you’re feeling inside. Just act the part and people will follow. People respond to authority. It’s human nature. I umped in NYC for two years, finally quit after getting tired of the narcissists on steroids. But it was a lot of fun, and I learned some good life lessons. And I developed a healthy respect for professional umpires. It’s not an easy job.

  2. Excellent article. I umped once for about 3 weeks when I was in Germany in the Army. I could not play because my left hand was partially paralyzed when I was electrocuted while trouble shooting a radar. Played hell with my bowling too. Fast pitch softball is a little easier than baseball I would suppose. We had 2 umps, and I got paid 5.00 a game. Never really had a problem with any of the players. What was cool to me was the second game I called, the pitcher threw a perfect game. This guy was really good, and his pitches were pretty fast too. I respect most of the umps in the majors, but some are just so inconsistent and bad it makes it hard to enjoy the game.

  3. I agree with you, Michael. The inconsistencies are very frustrating and distracting for us fans. Must even be worse for the players who aren’t allowed to argue balls and strikes. You can see it in the looks on their faces, though. I don’t remember pitch-framing as being such a valued skill among catchers back when we were young as it is today. Is that correct? When MLB finally goes to electronic balls and strikes, pitch-framing will become a lost art, but I won’t mind. The spitball is also a lost art, and no one seems to miss it.

    1. That is correct. Pitch framing I had never heard of until the Dodgers traded for Grandal, then all I heard was how great he was at it. Probably a good thing for him because he was pitiful at blocking pitches in the dirt, and passed balls. He also was not a real good clutch hitter. I would rate Roseboro, Yeager, and Sciocia as better defensive catchers than he is. Better at throwing out runners for sure. And I also think he is not a very good game caller. A skill I think Barnes and Smith have picked up well. My other thought is I can see them pulling the ball into the strike zone when it is obviously out of the zone. Can’t these umps see that movement also? I at first did not like the idea of the automated zone. But when it comes, I will be glad it is here.

      1. And of course Roy Campanella. Those four all have comparable stats defensively. Campy did excell at throwing out would be base stealers. He threw out 63% or better for four of his ten seasons and 57% for his career.

        I have never bought into the pitch framing thing. The catcher yanks the pitch up or in. There is nothing subtle about it. That is irrelevant to where the ball crossed the plate. I don’t know how the ump can even see where his glove is. I know others on this blog have talked more about the value of it but I can only talk about what I see.

        1. I agree with you Harold, pitch framing is seemingly an attempt to statistically track a subjective evaluation that changes by umpires with their own strike zones. Recently, Austin Hedges was statistically considered an outstanding pitch framer, but if you watch him there is nothing subtle about him pulling pitches into the strike zone. When Jonathan Lucroy was with the Brewers he was considered to be the elite pitch framer, but when he was traded to the Texas Rangers he quickly deteriorated into one of the worst in all of MLB. He did not overnight lose ability, he switched pitching staffs. The variability of strike zones, not knowing whether a pitch would have been called a strike without being “framed,” and the differences amongst pitching staffs makes it difficult to embrace the framing stat as reliable.

        2. You are so right about Campy. He was other worldly at throwing out runners, and he wasn’t a bad hitter either. You look at some of the older guys who came through LA at the end of thier careers, and most were good defenders. Even Haller who came from the despised ones was a good defensive catcher. The movement of the glove is so blatant, I do not know how an ump could not see it, but they obviously do not. I think my biggest gripe about the umps is obvious. The inconsistency’s of the zone. Hitters do not have a problem with umps when the zone is the same all night,or day. The problem arises when it moves through the entire game. The ump last night did the same thing. Sometimes the high in the zone pitch was a strike, and sometimes it was not. Buehler questioned him a couple of times about pitches that he said were low, that according to the zone on the TV, were strikes.

  4. I umped all over Northern California in the 70s and 80s. Mostly when I was in college (5 years) then a few years when I was teaching. It was extra income. Did men’s and women’s softball, youth baseball, high school, jr college, Legion and semi pro. On the weekends I wasn’t playing in a tournament, I was umping one. Most of the players up there knew who I was so I didn’t get much crap from anyone. I started college when I was 26 so I was a bit older and had played a lot more ball than any of the others doing it. I got training from a good friend who was a minor league umpire, but I didn’t need much. It came natural to me. Every umpire makes mistakes of course but to watch these guys at the Major League level make them is annoying. I’m not talking about blown calls necessarily, I made my share of those. Things can happen fast out there. I’m talking about getting caught out of position and just appearing to be lazy about it. Joe West is the worst I’ve seen with that. Rule is “get the 90”. Nobody out there should see it better than you do. I umped with a guy who had one glass eye so perspective was not easy for him. I had 20/10 vision so picking up spin was easy for me, I had done it for years. As a catcher in Legion and Connie Mack I had a pretty good knowledge of the strike zone. I very much enjoyed my years umpiring. Only ran one guy, manager of the local semi pro team in Redding and after the game he came up to me and said “what took you so long?” He was trying to get run to get his team jacked up. “Well geez Jerry, let me know next time and we’ll put on a show.” The toughest games to umpire were the lower leagues and women’s softball. They do things that just can’t be anticipated.

    Though I got few complaints, who knows what my strike zone would have looked like with ABS. I continue to be astonished at how many are missed. Honestly if it were me I’d welcome ABS. With all the heat they are taking, and miss 21%. of strike 3 calls deservedly so, you would think the umps have had enough of hearing about it.

    1. I agree with you, Badger, positioning yourself properly is the key to umping. You should have a clear view to make the call. Certainly, calling balls and strikes is the hardest part of it. I remember a study from some years ago that showed that star pitchers, like CK, got the benefit of the doubt from umpires, when they compared the ump’s call to the electronic one. So it wasn’t only random errors. The umps had systematic biases in favor of certain pitchers, the established stars. The biases were probably unconscious. When in doubt, they (unconsciously) figured that the great ones were thowing strikes. Another reason to go electronic is that it would eliminate those biases.

    1. And that’s one of the problems with ABS. A ball moving down can both cross the strike zone and hit the dirt. Such a pitch should be called a ball but ABS will call it a strike. This has been an issue for a couple of years. I’m surprised that companies making such systems haven’t incorporated either a neural network algorithm or alternative artificial intelligence schemes to correct the issue. Perhaps it’s a processing speed issue?

      1. Why would a pitch that by definition is a strike need to be called a ball?

        The strike zone is over the plate, period. What happens after it crosses through that zone is irrelevant

      2. By definition, any ball that crosses the strike zone while over the plate is a strike. Why would it not be? Simply because it drops? Koufax’s curve ball rarely stayed in the strike zone it’s entire arc. Kersh’s is the same. If it hits the zone while crossing the plate it is a strike, and ABS will eliminate balls like one that was called a strike last night and was 4 inches off the plate.

        1. I’m all for ABS to take it’s needed spot in baseball. Instant replay is great and doesn’t take much time and it’s obviously good for the sport as so many calls are reversed.

  5. DC, thank you for the very entertaining article this morning. Between you and philjones, you gave me much more of an understanding about what an umpire does, and goes through on his journey to MLB. It is such a small percentage that make it and they have to go through the same rigors as a minor league player with lots of travel and low pay to mention a couple of things like it maybe being hard on married life. I can see that the umpires going to umpire school or working their way through the minor league system do it for the love of the game and like being involved in it.

    Ron Luciano’s books, “The Umpire Strikes Back” and “Strike Two” are wonderful stories. I have read and owned both of them. He was so witty and it was a shame his life ended so tragically.

    So to answer your title question, So You Want To Be An Umpire?………Nope but I appreciate them more.

      1. Nope , I kept score at all my kids games and managed some of their teams so I had some contact with umpires. I saw one ump get hit in the throat with a pitched ball when the catcher ducked. I argued my case many times on the interpretation of the rules. I think it is a hard job and a few of them go overboard but for the most part I respect them. Besides, who else is going to get the blame when you lose?

        1. We once protested a game I was playing in softball. The reason was our second baseman had stepped on the bag on a grounder to him with a runner on. The ump called the runner safe and said he did not tag him. We could not convince this moron that it was a force play, and he did not need to tag the runner. So we protested the game. And the committee, obviously as ignorant of the rules as the ump, over turned the protest. That kind of thing galls me more than anything else. When the ump is so blatantly wrong, and then the other guys back him up.

  6. I know all umps want to get it right. But for awhile they were getting too much about their brethren thing even at the major level and that made me look at them through a lens of authority bullies, sorta like asshole cops and when that happens getting the calls right took a back burner. The biggest example I can think of was when a Dodger runner (I don’t remember who) was called out because the throw beat the runner to the base, but the first baseman was about a yard from the base. Everybody saw that but the umps didn’t step up to right it, they backed their brethren. And thus my hatred remains. Okay, I’m stubborn. But I’m on the side to get it right. Just because there’s less umpire positions that world leader positions shouldn’t mean they need to be treated as endangered, their job is to simply get it right.

  7. I went 66 years + without knowing what a bedbug was or even if there was really such a thing. But I can now tell you they are real and they are evil! Bring back DDT……PLEASE! I have an exterminator scheduled for oct.7th. That seems like years away!

    1. Quad,
      My Daughter had bed bugs in Las Vegas
      Only way to get rid of them is heating the house/apartment to very high level for like 8 to 10 hours. It is expensive.
      Good Luck

      1. Thanks but the exterminator is supposed and said to be very good at ridding them. Not likely to help with my COPD. I had gotten a new bed and put each of the four legs in ashtrays with poison in each but somehow I got bites last night which welt up on me.

  8. Great stuff Harold.
    I was surprised at what the umps earn at the MLB level but it looks by your numbers that baseball is the lowest of the major sports on a per game basis.
    Ron Luciano was an absolute treat to watch and also to listen to. One of the few who actually added to the sport. By the way, one minor typo in your post. You said he died in 1955. I’m sure you meant to say 1995.

      1. My favorite ump was Leslie Neilson in The Naked Gun. Now that ump was entertaining. Truthfully, I liked Luciano. Guy was really a personality. I remember his tete a tete with Lasorda in the world series. But Bill Klem back in the day must have been something to see also. He was the one who declared, it ain’t nothin til I call it.

  9. In response to Badgers question about a strike is a strike, I refer you to the following articles;

    https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/automated-strike-zone-whiffs-at-arizona-fall-league/

    https://www.baseballprospectus.com/news/article/37347/robo-strike-zone-not-simple-think/

    I am not privy to the algorithms that are used in the various systems but I would think a neural net (where you teach the AI system what would be a strike should or should not be) would address the issue. The first article mentions a 4 second latency period so processing speed appears to be an issue.

  10. Buehler consulted Dick Mountain about how to deal with blisters. The Possum, Dodger trainer, Nakajima, used laser therapy, and Bull Riders balm were used to help him with his blister problem. He kept looking at his finger, and because the slider caused most of the irritation, he did not use it much last night. Congrats to Yadier Molina who collected hit # 2000 last night. He is among the large class of elderly catchers who will be free agents at the end of the season. Lakers win a close one, and along with Miami are one game away from the Finals. And in a bit of good news, the Pac-12 is going to play a 7 game season, so there will be college football in Cali this year.

  11. Heaney vs Kersh tonight. Angels have won a couple of series in a row, and have a couple of rookie outfielders who are raking, and neither one is named Adell. Fans should keep track of the Pads vs SF series this weekend. They play 4 games. If Sf loses 2 or 3 they could get knocked out of the playoffs depending on what the Brewers do. Milwaukee plays 4 against the Cardinals. Cardinals are going to end up playing only 58 games.

  12. I really appreciate Betts, but last night he cost Bueler what should have been a win. In the 4th with 2 outs Betts dropped what would have been the third out in foul territory. Bueler threw 11 more pitches to get that 3rd out which is probably why he wasn’t allowed to pitch the 5th. Question – Since the game has changed ( Openers, etc.) should there be a change in who can get the win? Starting pitcher used to be expected to finish what they started, but that is no longer the case. Bueler left the game with the lead after giving up only 1 hit in 4 innings. Perhaps the rule should be changed as to who can get the win.

    1. Since the game has stats for everything, there ought to be a way to figure which pitcher contributes most to a win. Use that stat to award the win to the pitcher who made the biggest difference on the winning team, no matter how many innings he pitched or when he pitched them.

  13. Doubt that will happen. And in Mookies defense, that was not an easy play. He was on a pitch count true, but right now personal stats take a back seat to being ready for the playoffs. Kersh is pitching tonight, I do not think he will get more than 5 innings either. Not with the bullpen getting ready also.

  14. Great Article DC. Very informative and well done. I’m glad that DBMom and I had a hand in inspiring you to post this. I certainly don’t mind you taking my answer to another level and expanding on this topic. I really enjoyed this.
    I have been pretty vocal sometimes about poor balls and strike calls. A decent zone and consistency is all I ask. And that’s all players ask. Same zone in the 1st as the 9th. Don’t pull a rabbit out of the hat.
    Like Badger, I too am astonished at the number of missed calls. In some ways umpires have gotten a bad rap due to technology. When the superimposed strike zone on TV was introduced, it changed everything. Before that it was all guesswork whether the ump’s call was right or wrong. There was no evidence one way or the other. It was over in an instant. The K-Zone actually provided visual, recorded evidence as to the the accuracy of the call. An umpire that may have had a great reputation as a balls and strike ump may now be seen as missing pitches.
    But consistency is the name of the game. And that’s the goal of the ABS System. I’m all for it and I think most umps are too.
    I still can’t resolve the “art” of pitch framing as it has become part of the game. I get that where the ball is caught shouldn’t matter. It’s where it crossed any portion of the plate, not just the front, and that is what the umpire is looking at. At the same time, I think where and how its caught does influence some umpires. It might be another “individual” interpretation deal. I would actually would be influenced in a negative way as an ump if the catcher yanked a obvious ball out of the zone to the center of the zone trying to fool me. We’d have a conversation about that. So, I’m unsure if framing works or not. The announcers sure seem to think it does. But the ABS will change that.
    Hey Bear, I thought of another funny Yogi story I can’t resist posting. My brain is on a 3 day delay.
    It’s from a book “Driving Mr. Yogi” about the friendship between Ron Guidry and Yogi. It began in 1999, when Berra was reunited with the Yankees after a long self-exile, the result of being unceremoniously fired by George Steinbrenner fourteen years before. A reconciliation between Berra and the Boss meant that Berra would attend spring training again. Guidry befriended “Mr. Yogi” instantly. And in Yogi, Guidry found not just an elder companion or source of amusement – he found a best friend. He would pick up Yogi in his pick up and see he got everywhere. So, Yogi is waiting outside a Florida hotel, waiting to be picked up by Guidry. Berra is usually cheerful in the morning, but today Guidry can sense Berra is perturbed. When Guidry asks about the source of the anxiety, he learns that Berra is worried about a trip from Tampa to Los Angeles later in the week. The reason for the trip?
    “I got to make an “affliction” commercial,” Berra complains.
    Noticing that Guidry seems puzzled, Berra adds, “You know, with that goddamn duck.”
    Guidry realizes that Berra is referring to a TV ad for” AFLAC”, with the talking duck. We remember the ad in a barber shop “not too close what ya think I got that insurance?”
    Guidry picked Yogi up later in the week at the airport and asked him how was the trip? Yogi said okay but you know “that damn Duck doesn’t really talk”. Ron never knew if he was serious or not.
    Hey I like how we are playing. I mostly like the line ups and the pitchers are getting work. Buehler yesterday makes me wonder the rotation schedule. Will he get a small tune up Sat or Sunday. I doubt it. But that puts him in Game 2 of the Wild Card Series with 6 days rest. Maybe they wanted to buy time in case the blister was an issue last night. But 6 days between starts is a lot.
    Thanks again Harold.

    1. That is classic Yogi. And Guidry, Louisiana Lightning was a pretty good pitcher. Koufax for a few years did not go to the Dodger facilities. Cannot remember when, but it was conspicuous. I really wish they and Piazza could get past the anger that has kept them apart. Mike after all was a Dodger, and one of the best. Seems to me he would have a lot to offer young players. I do not think Buehler gets any more time out there. I have little problem with him pitching on 6 days rest. He is a special talent.

  15. Jeff,

    I had written a response to Badgers comment about ABS systems and erroneous called strikes but it wasn’t posted. Said it was under review but wasn’t cleared. Why was this?

    1. Jeff is on the road to Reno. He will probably check it out later. And comments regularly get reviewed. Is not always Jeff, just the way Word Press works.

  16. A couple of things before I have to go for the day. Last night. Davis and Orel went completely off of the tracks when they started talking about Jort’s. That is the sort of inane non baseball crap that drives me nuts. Then they started in about them doing Karaoke in a hotel they stayed in. I am sure glad Orel did not attempt to sing because I was ready to launch the remote at my big screen. It was reported the other day that a Dodger minor leaguer had been involved in a fatal accident in the Dominican. Cruz is not a Dodger prospect, he is a Pirate prospect per MLBTR. His bail was set at 35,000 dollars, and he faces 5 years in prison since he was under the influence. Homer Bailey DFA’d by the Royals. Talk to y’all later.

  17. Nice article, Harold. I never wanted to umpire. It’s a thankless job. If I am going to get ridiculed then I’ll do something I like that pays better.

    The umps will stay, but electronics are here to stay. We could put a chip in a batter’s shoes and on the bases. BANG!

    Instant Gratification.

    Next week will be eventful:

    1. The Playoffs
    2. I’ll have a new granddaughter (Violet)
    3. I’ll find out if I have to have my knee replaced.

    It’s all good!

    1. Advance congrats on the new granddaughter Mark. Still time to change her name from Violet to Blue. Work on it.

  18. Doc says he expects to only carry 12-13 pitchers for the first playoff series. That leaves 15-16 position players.
    Unless Andrew changes his mind for him, we need to start re-calculating our roster predictions.

    1. Here’s my guess:

      Pitchers (13): Kershaw, Buehler, Gonsolin, May, Urias, Jansen, Treinen, McGee, Kolarek, Graterol, Baez, Gonzalez, Kelly . I don’t think Wood will make it.

      Position Players (15): Mookie, Seager, JT, Muncy, Smith, Belli, CT3, Pollock, Joc, Rios, Barnes, Kike, Beaty, Ruiz, McKinstry . They can only use Lux at second in the field and he hasn’t hit any better than McKinstry so to me the choice should be ZacMac who gives them much more versatility in the field and, for this year, just as good a bat.

      If only 12 pitchers, subtract Kelly and add Lux. I expect 13/15.

    1. Thanks DBM. I totally missed Floro and expect him to be on the roster. If it’s me, that eliminates Kelly, but somehow I doubt Doc will feel the same way. I think all of the other pitchers I named deserve to be there more than Kelly does.

    1. You and me both Bobby. I read or heard the other day that fielding grounders from the side is now the preferred way so you’re automatically in position to throw, but it seems as though Corey makes an awful lot of errors using that approach.
      And, sure enough, it just cost them three runs.

      1. Pollock is better defensively than Pederson, and he has played well this year. None of Seager’s miscues have really hurt the team and he more than makes up for it with his bat, as has AJ

        1. Pollock’s defense has been better this year. It wasn’t good at all last season. Losing the weight has helped.

        2. That’s wrong, yours eyes, already tired by time, are deceiving you, according to Fangraphs Pollock is the worst defensive player in the OF at – 3.2,
          Joc is -1.4.
          Pollock and Seager eyes hurt to see them play defense.
          In regular season games, those deficiencies are not looked at in the win and loss column because the team compensates for them with a lot of offense, but in October, where the games are much more even, defense is very important, defense saves games and Seager and Pollock are two holes that the team has in defense, it is something worrisome, it is a problem, I hope the team is able to score many runs.

          1. Good observations, Horse. Both are liabilities, defensively, but at this point in time, I don’t think either have blown games or a series because of it. There have been and still are weaknesses that are far more glaring and dangerous than these. HRs can deflect and blind most fans to the more subtle aspects of the game, but I think our starting pitching is just about the weakest part of the team. AF addressed the needed RH bat and max player in getting Mookie. But the pitching is not anywhere near what they were hoping for this season, BP excluded. The rooks have lots of potential but are not battle tested and constantly meddled with by Doc who is like a nervous mother. We have the required amount of starters, but we don’t have the required amount of experience to go to battle with this rotation and have the confidence of past years. This is a wobbly rotation. HRs also hide this fact, and I’m certainly not complaining about the amount of wins we’ve gotten, no matter how we’ve gotten them, but we haven’t done it with a dominating rotation as we used to.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *