Umpire

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Definition[edit]

An MLB umpire conducting a training exercise

An Umpire is a person designated to enforce the rules of baseball during a game. In Major League Baseball, there are four umpires per game working as an umpiring crew. One umpire is positioned behind the plate (the home plate umpire) who is responsible for calling balls and strikes as well as plays at the plate, and one behind each of the bases (the base umpires) who are positioned to make calls on plays at their base, or in the outfield. The home plate umpire also has responsibility for keeping the official line-up cards; he is the only person who can determine if a substitution is legal or whether a batter is out of turn; he must be advised beforehand if a manager intends to make a double switch. During the All-Star Game and postseason games, two additional umpires take the field, positioned along the left and right foul lines in the outfield. Their main responsibility is to make calls on whether balls hit to the outfield are fair or foul, and whether balls have been caught on the fly or trapped. At lower levels, games can be umpired by three, two or even one official; in fact, in the early days of professional baseball, the one-umpire system was most common.

Umpires are not restricted to making calls at their respective bases, although one umpire usually defers to his colleague closest to the base. For example, all umpires can call a balk, as it may only be visible from one particular angle of view, or an ejection, since only one umpire may have overheard offending words or seen an offending gesture. On complex plays, umpires will often move to cover a different base and can end up making a call there, much like a player on defense will cover a base that is not usually his responsibility. It may happen that two umpires make conflicting rulings on the same play, in which case all the umpires will confer to make a joint decision. It is very rare that one umpire will overrule his colleague, and again this is usually after a short conference among all members of a crew.

In Major League baseball, Umpires work in four-man crews headed by a crew chief. Until the 1980s, they would work the whole season without taking a break. The Umpires' union staged a series of strikes beginning in the late 1970s that improved their working conditions, including giving each umpire paid vacations during the season, and bringing their salaries up to more respectable levels. Like players, umpires come up through the minor leagues after attending an umpiring school, or working college or amateur games. They start at the lowest levels - Rookie-level or short-season class A - and work their way up to AAA and eventually the majors. Promotions are supposed to be based on merit, and if an umpire fails to move up to the next level within a specified number of years, he (or she) is dismissed. It is therefore a very competitive process to reach the Major Leagues, although, once there, umpires tend to stay until they retire or are forced out for off-the-field problems. It is now exceedingly rare for former players to become umpires, although this was quite common until the 1950s or 1960s.

Umpires are usually dressed in uniforms in which the colors blue or black predominate, thus they are often known as either the Men in Blue or the Men in Black, although they have worn other types of clothing at different times in the past. The home plate umpire wears a mask similar to a catcher's mask, as well as a chest protector, now worn inside the shirt. In the American League until the 1980s, the home plate umpire used to wear a large "balloon-type" chest protector outside his uniform; this meant that his position behind the plate was different than that of National League umpires, who wore the inside chest protector. It was argued that as a result of this difference of equipment, AL Umpires called a higher strike zone than their NL brethren. These differences have disappeared as MLB now operates with one set of umpires, who all wear the same equipment. However, the strike zone tends to vary widely from one umpire to another, to a point where MLB tried to address the problem with technology: the Questec system was a laser sensor which determined whether the ball crossed the plate within or outside the strike zone. While Questec was not used to make decisions during a game, umpires whose rulings differ markedly from the "objective" decisions of the machine were considered by MLB to be under-performing. Not surprisingly, this system, introduced in 2003, proved to be controversial both with umpires and with pitchers who like to work the edges of the strike zone, and was faded out after the 2008 season. More sophisticated systems were developed in subsequent years and MLB came back to the idea of potentially introducing them into play by having the independent Atlantic League test out such a system in 2019.

The history of the position[edit]

  • 1876, William McLean umpires the first National League game.
  • 1883, The American Association is the first league to use its own staff of umpires instead or relying on local hires.
  • 1912, The use of an umpire behind the plate and one in the field becomes standard.
  • 1947, The use of six umpires for World Series games is mandated.
  • 1952, The leagues mandate four umpires should work each official game.
  • 1966, Emmett Ashford breaks the color barrier among umpires.
  • 2000, The leagues abolish their individual umpire crews in favor of one crew for all of Major League Baseball.

Further Reading[edit]

  • Phil Birnbaum: "Is There Racial Bias Among Umpires?", The Baseball Research Journal, SABR, Vol. 39, Number 2 (Fall 2010), pp. 65-70.
  • Thomas Boswell: "Lives of Noisy Desperation", in Why Time Begins on Opening Day, Penguin Books, New York, NY, 1984, pp. 105-116.
  • David Fleitz: "The Green and the Blue: The Irish American Umpire, 1880-1965", in The Baseball Research Journal, SABR, Volume 39, Number 1 (Summer 2010), pp. 27-30.
  • Larry Gerlach: The Men in Blue: Conversations with Umpires, The Viking Press, New York, NY, 1980.
  • Larry R. Gerlach and Bill Nowlin, eds.: The SABR Book of Umpires and Umpiring, SABR, Phoenix, AZ, 2017. ISBN 978-1-943816-45-3
  • Andrew Goldblatt: Major League Umpires' Performance, 2007-2010: A Comprehensive Statistical Review, McFarland, Jefferson, NC, 2011.
  • Lee Gutkind: The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand! The Game as Umpires See It, Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale, IL, 1999 (originally published in 1975). ISBN 978-0809321957
  • Harry "Steamboat" Johnson: Standing the Gaff: The Life and Hard Times of a Minor League Umpire, Bison Books, University of Nebraska Press, 1994 (originally published in 1935). ISBN 978-0803275799
  • Ken Kaiser and David Fisher: Planet of the Umps: A Baseball Life from Behind the Plate, Thomas Dunne Books, New York, NY, 2003. ISBN 978-0312304164
  • Tom Larwin et. al.: "Observations of Umpires at Work", in The Baseball Research Journal, SABR, Volume 40, Number 1 (Spring 2011), pp. 77-87.
  • Ron Luciano: The Umpire Strikes Back, 1982.
  • Ron Luciano: Strike Two, 1985.
  • Bob Motley and Brian Motley: Ruling Over Monarchs, Giants & Stars: Umpiring in the Negro Leagues & Beyond, Sports Publishing LLC, Champaign, IL, 2007.
  • Bill Nowlin: Working a "Perfect Game": Conversations With Umpires, Summer Game Books, South Orange, NJ, 2020. ISBN 978-1938545603
  • Dave Pallone and Alan Steinberg: Behind the Mask: My Double Life in Baseball, Viking USA, 1990. ISBN 0670833126
  • Michael Schafer: Life Behind the Mask: Memoir of a Youth Baseball Umpire, McFarland, Jefferson, NC, 2011.
  • Mike Shannon: Everything Happens in Chillicothe: A Summer in the Frontier League with Max McLeary, the One-Eyed Umpire, McFarland, Jefferson, NC, 2004.
  • John C. Skipper: Umpire: Classic Baseball Stories from the Men Who Made the Calls, McFarland, Jefferson, NC, 1997. ISBN 978-0-7864-0364-6
  • Dave Vincent: "A Statistical Look at the Men in Blue", in The Baseball Research Journal, SABR, vol. 36 (2007), pp. 13-18.
  • Bruce Weber: As They See 'Em: A Fan's Travels in the Land of Umpires, Scribner Books, New York, NY, 2009.
  • Jonathan Weeks: The Umpire Was Blind! Controversial Calls by MLB’s Men in Blue, McFarland, Jefferson, NC. ISBN 978-1-4766-8032-3

Related Sites[edit]

also see Category:Umpires