This is a video we created to help in the training for our High School, Babe Ruth and other League baseball Umpires. Created by The Manchester Regional Baseball Umpires Association in New Hampshir...
This is a video we created to help in the training for our High School, Babe Ruth and other League baseball Umpires. Created by The Manchester Regional Baseball Umpires Association in New Hampshire, it is intended as an aid to our umpires, not an absolute reference. Please feel free to use this as an aid as well. Thanks, http://www.mrbua.org
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This video has a good idea, but mechanically it is incorrect. Angle over distance.... 90 degree to the play.... Move on an arc to get to the proper position at first, as well he is setting way too late.
The BU in the video calls time then balk which is in fact the wrong order. A balk is a delayed dead ball because the batter could still hit a pitch for a home run, or the runner(s) could advance more than one base on an overthrow on a pick off. The proper procedure is to call the balk, then kill the play if nothing else happens.
I don't like standing to close because it is harder to move out of the way of a sharp line drive. I was wear they teach these guys and sharp ground ball got a piece of my foot when i tried to avoid it and im quick thats how fast it comes back. Since I am fast I have more time to move on a hit so it doesn't make a difference for me. Just my opinion.
IF BU has the catch/no catch - meaning the ball is in the "V" (all fly balls except those taking F7 or F9 toward the line) - he will go to the edge of the working area to make the call.
I agree. A 90 degree angle is best. That is what they teach in real umpire schools. Everything is about angle... angle over distance. Also, I think the base ump is too close to the play. You need to be reasonably far away to see everything on a close play at first.. 15-20 feet IMO. I also think the B and C were too deep. That is where you play when your only responsibility is second base, like in a 4 man system.
There is not a two line answer. It is largely dependent on the situation and depth of the hit. However, most likely you are going to stay in C or graviate to C for a call at third.
Again, there are situation where you will stay in B... I.e. R1 on first, shallow ball into the outfield. In a two man system, many associations have the plate man coming down to cover third so you stay in B. If all hell breaks loose that means you might have to cover home on the rotation
There is only 1 situation where BU has the play at the plate. It is when he goes out on a trouble ball from the A (no runners). PU has the batter/runner to 3rd, BU busts it home AFTER the ball brings him back to the infield.
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90 degree to the play....
Move on an arc to get to the proper position at first, as well he is setting way too late.
Again, there are situation where you will stay in B... I.e. R1 on first, shallow ball into the outfield. In a two man system, many associations have the plate man coming down to cover third so you stay in B. If all hell breaks loose that means you might have to cover home on the rotation