Mike,
Thanks for getting the joke. I'll try to get some new video on my own today. Last weeks video was erased from the owner's camera in prep for today (designated team photographer....keeps this particular parent busy and out of trouble
).
Thanks for including coaches and players in your seminars. It takes great umps, great coaches and great players to have a great game.
I was looking at videos available on the web of LH balk calls. You know the 45 deg line is directly towards the first base line from the center of the plate. It intersects the 1st base line at 90 degrees about a foot short of halfway to first.
Lots of the balks called were well north of that line, well within the rules. However, it seemed to me that the balks all had one thing in common. The pitcher foot was pointed towards the first baseline and his chest was pointed towards the first baseline more so than first base. All hallmarks of a good well practiced move, not a violation of the rules.
I'm wondering how many umpires have actually worked with LHPs on a mound outside of a game situation. Chalked the 45, fox tailed the mound, observed a move from behind the plate then gone and looked at where the foot actually landed. Perhaps even throw in some video taken from the first base dugout which clearly shows if the pitcher is drifting towards home. That's the way I teach the move, that's the way it is taught at many colleges and without doing this as an umpire I'm uncertain how one can learn to see what he's seeing and make an appropriate ruling.
I know you guys practice balls and strikes, hand signs, proper placement and positioning. I've even been to a short umpire school. But a great move, even when perfectly legal, is very deceptive to even those of us who teach it and see it every day. Good moves have heads, feet, arms, virtually everything pointing one way and the throw goes another. The knee lift, going home or to first, is very slow and deliberate trying to get the runner to commit early. However, only the overly aggresive base runner will have problems at first.
I'm concerned that some may be attempting to take something very special out of the game when clearly the rule writers want it there.....else they would have made the 45 rule more like 22 and one half.
For Jimmy: Yes, in this particular case I was "defense" however, I don't complain when on the receiving end either. I lump a good lefty move in with a guy who has a hellacious drag bunt or a table drop curve. All are very special to me, difficult to learn and difficult to execute. It shows me a player who has spent an enormous amout of time on their game practicing to be the best they can be.
I say runners beware. As long as he meets that 45 have at it. If you want to steal on a lefty with a high slow leg lift go on first move and bet the opposition will have trouble making the two throws, catches and tags typically required to get you out.