I have been watching some of the College Baseball Tournament on ESPNU. For the most part, it has been great baseball. However, the umpires continually get in the way.
Take, for example, the UofMiami vs. Mississippi game. The lefty for UofM threw a curveball that was consistently 6-8 inches outside on the right-handed batter. The ball would cross the plate outside of the chalk line that defines the inside of the left-handed hitter's batter's box. The catcher would catch it about 4 inches off the outside part of the plate. Yet, if the ball did not hit the dirt, it was called a strike. Even the ESPNU announcers were appalled. They commented that the umpire had a "Tom Glavine" strike zone, meaning, of course, that the umpire called a strike on the balls 6-8 inches off the plate. Maddux got the same sorts of calls in his prime.
The result was that the Mississippi hitters begain chasing these balls and even some further out. Essentially, the umpire took the bat out of their hands.
Now, some will say that the Mississippi hitters should have adjusted, or that their pitcher would get the same calls if he could show the umpire that he had mastered that sort of control. But that argument is irrelevant. Does the rule book say: "The strike zone is that zone defined by the umpire on each pitch"? Heck no.
Umpires need to simply call the strike zone as it is defined and stay the heck out of the way. They don't need to insert themselves into the game and prove how knowledgable they are or how important they are. Just read the rulebook and enforce the rules, including the rules pertaining to balls and strikes.
And lest you think that this was an aberration, let me assure you that this was more often the case than not. I was appalled at how often the umpires seemed to enforce some bizarre notion of the strike zone--their own. Moreover, this sort of selfish, egocentric behavior is now common even at the HS level. I have seen it change the outcome of games.
So, umpires, I am pleading--don't steal the game from the players--call the strike zone in the book, not your own creative strike zone.
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