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From the Assignor's
Desk... Assignments:
http://www.thearbiter.net
Remember.....Get 3rd Baseline extended...

Note: 1) With the advent of Friday/Saturday
conference dates and teams playing at one site on Friday and the other
site on Saturday, the opportunity for friction to develop has increased.
This will become more evident in the latter part of the season as teams
battle for playoff positions. Since we have different crews working each
day, communication is imperative. If any incident occurs during a game
on Friday, or you suspect that something may carry over to Saturday, please
let me know so that I can alert the crew working the Saturday games. Hopefully
nothing will happen, but as you all know, it is better to be forewarned
than have something blow up on you. It might still blow up but you will
be prepared to take notes.
Note: 2) I have switched the umpire number,
717-269-4891 to Nextel. For those of you that have Nextel, my direct connect
number is: 196*53*59138. Send me yours.

The strike zone is probably the most difficult aspect of umpiring to master.
It takes a lot of games and a lot of practice. There are pitches that
technically meet the definition of a strike that are balls and there are
pitches that meet the definition of a ball that are strikes. You have
to be able to know what's too high, what's too low, what's outside and
what's inside.
There is an old saying, "perception is reality." The "perception"
is not what you see, but rather what all of the players, coaches and fans
see. Remember, only you and the catcher are behind the plate. Everyone
else has a different angle. The pitcher can crank off a beautiful curve
ball that breaks sharply, briefly enters the strike zone and goes down
and out causing the catcher to go to his right and into the dirt to catch
it. You call it a strike, which it is, and everyone starts screaming and
yelling. The next pitch is a fast ball, mid thigh and two inches off the
plate right into the catchers mitt. You call it a ball, which it is and
everyone is screaming again. So, you learn to start adjusting. The secret
is knowing how far to adjust and also keep it consistent throughout the
game. The next game, depending on the pitchers, you may have to adjust
again.
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