I like this little reviews. It's good to read the rules over, and over, but it is also good, and reinforcing to have them presented visually. A lot of what is mentioned here is the same as PBUC, and is especially important for newer, less-experienced umpires. Experience is a good teacher, but no one wants to catch a foul ball in the face as a lesson.
I had a similar play in 2023. I called strike 3, batter claimed the pitch touched him-I didn't have that. Coach went nuts arguing batter was hbp and should get first base. He wasn't receptive to hearing that hbp or not was irrelevant because the strike call superceded any possible award, and got himself ejected.
Another great and exact way to remeasure the 6" from home to batter's box is to lay down 2 baseballs side by side touching one another in a straight line. The ball is 3" wide so 2 - 6". Hope this helps.
Great video as usual. Any safety tips when younger or inexperienced catchers slide way out to the outside corner of the plate? I assume maintaining the slot position is the safest? Thanks
#7. Just a reminder for those umpiring the Little League international tournament. This is legal for Little League. In that rule set you need the entire foot outside the box to be an out if the bat contacts the pitch. The plate is irrelevant. I only mention this, because it seems to come up a lot because high school umpires help out during the tournament.
It is important for umpires to know which rules set they are playing under before any game starts. Little League Rules differ from USSSA, from Triple Crown, from CABA, and from most local leagues. The rules may only differ slightly, but it can make a difference in the game, and it can prevent a lot of problems.
I've always been puzzled about the NFHS rule on touching the plate, and figured it was just one of those NFHS oddities probably coming from softball. However in the past year or so as I work more college-level games I learned NCAA has the same rule, and indeed I've talked to some umpires who just assumed batting the ball while touching the plate is illegal in all codes as they work mostly NFHS and NCAA and never explicitly learned OBR or other OBR-based codes. I still find it puzzling why the touching the plate should be special, I don't see any sense to it. It doesn't stop me from properly enforcing it, though I only call it when the batter's foot is CLEARLY on the plate, not just his big toe probably touching.
I submit pro umpires have their unique challenges. The hardest thing amateur umpires have to do is work different leagues and be razor sharp on all of the rule variances. In one week, I could work under 4 sets of rules.
@@davej3781 congrats on getting some NCAA games. What levels are you doing? The UIC I work with from the adjacent League is getting into college umpiring. He really wants me to go that way too, but I'm content sticking local for now. It's been fun talking with him about the process. He was in Florida during college spring break. I hope you're enjoying it!
The toughest thing to do as a umpire is to wait for the pitched ball to cross the plate before making a ball/strike call. Many pitches look like a ball/strike only to change just before they cross the plate. Having already made a call ball/strike you can't change it. I would not change my position behind the plate (till I was very experienced) as you have to learn how to call a ball/strike from each position.
For any illegally batted ball is it an instant call of time/dead ball? What happens to runners on base if there are any on? Great videos! They have helped me a lot going into my second year of umpiring!
Might wanna check wording on case play 2. I think was meant to say batter rolls elbow out of the batters box and is hit NOT into the strike zone. If the elbow was rolled into the strike zone it would be a strike not a ball.
I always hate that argument "how can you see the foot, you're supposed to be tracking the pitch!" well, once he hits the ball, there's no more pitch to track, so it's pretty easy to see where his foot is.
The "Coach Andy" character vs. Patrick the umpire is GOLD. Also, super helpful video. Thanks, keep making more.
MORE COACH ANDY!!😂😂
I like this little reviews. It's good to read the rules over, and over, but it is also good, and reinforcing to have them presented visually. A lot of what is mentioned here is the same as PBUC, and is especially important for newer, less-experienced umpires. Experience is a good teacher, but no one wants to catch a foul ball in the face as a lesson.
I had a similar play in 2023. I called strike 3, batter claimed the pitch touched him-I didn't have that. Coach went nuts arguing batter was hbp and should get first base. He wasn't receptive to hearing that hbp or not was irrelevant because the strike call superceded any possible award, and got himself ejected.
As a amateur Umpire I used the brush that I used to clean the plate to mark any lines.
Awesome, thanks! Love the quiz at the bottom to really reinforce the learnings.
Glad it was helpful!
Another great and exact way to remeasure the 6" from home to batter's box is to lay down 2 baseballs side by side touching one another in a straight line. The ball is 3" wide so 2 - 6". Hope this helps.
Very helpful as always!
Thanks for watching and supporting!
Thanks for clarifying a batter who doesn't move when hit by pitch. Can you do just a video tutorial for just that situation.Thanks
Great information, video tutorial, & role playing. #nailedAndyReid
Great video as usual. Any safety tips when younger or inexperienced catchers slide way out to the outside corner of the plate? I assume maintaining the slot position is the safest? Thanks
#7. Just a reminder for those umpiring the Little League international tournament. This is legal for Little League. In that rule set you need the entire foot outside the box to be an out if the bat contacts the pitch. The plate is irrelevant. I only mention this, because it seems to come up a lot because high school umpires help out during the tournament.
It is important for umpires to know which rules set they are playing under before any game starts. Little League Rules differ from USSSA, from Triple Crown, from CABA, and from most local leagues. The rules may only differ slightly, but it can make a difference in the game, and it can prevent a lot of problems.
I've always been puzzled about the NFHS rule on touching the plate, and figured it was just one of those NFHS oddities probably coming from softball. However in the past year or so as I work more college-level games I learned NCAA has the same rule, and indeed I've talked to some umpires who just assumed batting the ball while touching the plate is illegal in all codes as they work mostly NFHS and NCAA and never explicitly learned OBR or other OBR-based codes.
I still find it puzzling why the touching the plate should be special, I don't see any sense to it. It doesn't stop me from properly enforcing it, though I only call it when the batter's foot is CLEARLY on the plate, not just his big toe probably touching.
I submit pro umpires have their unique challenges. The hardest thing amateur umpires have to do is work different leagues and be razor sharp on all of the rule variances. In one week, I could work under 4 sets of rules.
@@davej3781 congrats on getting some NCAA games. What levels are you doing? The UIC I work with from the adjacent League is getting into college umpiring. He really wants me to go that way too, but I'm content sticking local for now. It's been fun talking with him about the process. He was in Florida during college spring break. I hope you're enjoying it!
The toughest thing to do as a umpire is to wait for the pitched ball to cross the plate before making a ball/strike call. Many pitches look like a ball/strike only to change just before they cross the plate. Having already made a call ball/strike you can't change it. I would not change my position behind the plate (till I was very experienced) as you have to learn how to call a ball/strike from each position.
Patrick the umpire v.s. Patick the h.c........ LOL!!!...... was that a pillow under coach patricks jersey????.... too funny!!!
😂😂 great explanation to Andy. Found the video very insightful. Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it!
For any illegally batted ball is it an instant call of time/dead ball? What happens to runners on base if there are any on? Great videos! They have helped me a lot going into my second year of umpiring!
In NFHS, it is an immediate dead ball, batter is out, and no runners can advance.
Smart guy!
Might wanna check wording on case play 2. I think was meant to say batter rolls elbow out of the batters box and is hit NOT into the strike zone. If the elbow was rolled into the strike zone it would be a strike not a ball.
It actually says he was hit on the shoulder outside the strike zone.
Not Andy Reid in an Umpire Classroom episode 😂
7:20. Making the coach FAT. 😅😅
Looks a lot like Andy Reed 😂
LMAO!!!!!
I always hate that argument "how can you see the foot, you're supposed to be tracking the pitch!"
well, once he hits the ball, there's no more pitch to track, so it's pretty easy to see where his foot is.
Please bring back the Chiefs coach at least once EVERY video!
Haha a fun cameo experience right!? I didn't realize he coaches baseball in the off-season.
Case play # is legal. Neither foot is entirely outside the box. Good video overall
oh my the coach wearing the Chiefs gear with the pillow under the shirt rofl
make some mechanics videos actually showing folks what to physically do
Any in particular you want to see first?
@@UmpireClassroomplate mechanics is where I would start
Rule No. 1: Don't be Angel Hernandez
Rule No. 2: In doubt, follow Rule No. 1
He makes a lot more money umpiring than I do umpiring. Have to weigh my options.