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ballerskrip said:I thought he was good for the first 4-5 innings.....
I stopped watching. Let me know guess, you think the Yankees are getting squeezed and the Twins pitchers are not?
ballerskrip said:I thought he was good for the first 4-5 innings.....
I stopped watching. Let me know guess, you think the Yankees are getting squeezed and the Twins pitchers are not?
JEA2880 said:Ever since the ump took one off his foot he's been horrendous. Personally, I think the Yankees are getting it considerably worse, and that's coming from a Mets fan (so clearly no bias!)...
Jays_Cards said:ballerskrip said:I thought he was good for the first 4-5 innings.....
I stopped watching. Let me know guess, you think the Yankees are getting squeezed and the Twins pitchers are not?
The ump has a bad zone, but he is consistent to both teams. I dont think there is much room to complain from either side.
andyduke86 said:Jays_Cards said:ballerskrip said:I thought he was good for the first 4-5 innings.....
I stopped watching. Let me know guess, you think the Yankees are getting squeezed and the Twins pitchers are not?
The ump has a bad zone, but he is consistent to both teams. I dont think there is much room to complain from either side.
It doesn't matter what the strike zone is as long as the ump is consistent. That's what's happening tonight.
Jays_Cards said:andyduke86 said:[quote="Jays_Cards":39zrmnjk]ballerskrip said:I thought he was good for the first 4-5 innings.....
I stopped watching. Let me know guess, you think the Yankees are getting squeezed and the Twins pitchers are not?
The ump has a bad zone, but he is consistent to both teams. I dont think there is much room to complain from either side.
It doesn't matter what the strike zone is as long as the ump is consistent. That's what's happening tonight.
rymflaherty said:I think it's only magnified by the fact that TBS has their pitch zone on every pitch....I know it's just a representation of the strike zone, but I think having it there for every pitch is only showing how inconsistent some of these umpires are.
pujolsjunkie said:Wow, you're right, this ump is horrible. He just threw that guy out for forgetting the avacados.
rymflaherty said:I think it's only magnified by the fact that TBS has their pitch zone on every pitch....I know it's just a representation of the strike zone, but I think having it there for every pitch is only showing how inconsistent some of these umpires are.
ballerskrip said:the definition of a strike.....When was the last time you saw a strike called above the belt? IT IS PART OF THE STRIKE ZONE....
Definition
The top of the strike zone is a horizontal line at the midpoint between the top of the batter's shoulders and the top of the uniform pants. The bottom of the strike zone is a line at the hollow beneath the kneecap. The right and left boundaries of the strike zone correspond to the edges of home plate. A pitch that touches the outer boundary of the zone is as much a strike as a pitch that is thrown right down the center. A pitch at which the batter does not swing and which does not pass through the strike zone is called a ball. Unofficially, the de facto enforced strike zone may be different at any different level.
Without further official guidance to supplement the Strike Zone definition in the MLB Official Rules, the following two decidedly un-official declarations may capture the two opposing extremes of allowable interpretation for a "Pitch-Not-Struck" to qualify as a strike under the rules:
(1) No such pitch shall be a strike unless an entire diameter of the ball—including stitched seams—has passed inside the area formed by all strike zone boundaries as defined in the official rules. [Favors Batter]
(2) Each such pitch shall be a strike if any portion—no matter how small, including stitched seams—or all of the ball has intersected or passed inside any strike zone boundary as defined in the official rules. [Favors Pitcher]
A batter who accumulates three strikes in a single batting appearance has struck out and is ruled out (with the exception of an uncaught third strike); a batter who accumulates four balls in a single appearance has drawn a base on balls (or walk) and is awarded advancement to first base. In very early iterations of the rules during the 19th century, it took up to 9 balls for a batter to earn a walk; however, to make up for this, the batter could request the ball to be pitched high, low, or medium.[citation needed]