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Originally posted by Will:
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Asking a couple of times and disagreeing civily is not a problem.
It is a problem with some.I remember asking a younger umpire the first time "where was that pitch a little in" I was told to keep my mouth shut on balls and strikes or I would be run" I was not obnoxious or yelling or screaming. As i said before when I first started coaching you could ask where pitch was without getting your head bit off.
Okay, so now it is a problem with "some", and you remember asking a "younger umpire:....
I won't talk about the grief I've been given from "younger coaches" or generalize current trends because of the actions of "some" coaches.
I will say that arguing balls and strikes is prohibited by rule. The length of rope handed to coaches will vary umpire to umpire. Whether the coach eventually puts it away or hangs himself is his decision.
And, it has always been thus.
A couple of "was that out" questions is expected as a coach attempts to understand the strike zone, or, in the case of smarter coaches, tries to see what effect his catcher may be having. But if it continues, it moves into the persistent catagory and needs to stop.
Some umpires are better at stopping it than others. Some coaches are better at knowing when to stop than others.
If this is new, you have had a sheltered coaching career.