Texas District 7 Little League: Umpires

Wednesday, November 25
2010 District 7 Umpire School - March 2010

On March 5 and 6th, 2010 District 7 will hold an umpire school...location yet to be determined.  This school will provide Little League umpires a similar school to what has been conducted at Little League Headquarters in Williamsport for the 3 and 7 day schools.  Set aside the Friday and Saturday, March 5 and 6th for this school (starts promptly at 7 p.m. on Friday evening and will last until about 10:00 p.m.)!  On Saturday, participants will receive 60/90 foot diamond training and an abbreviated Little League Regs/Rules review!!! You can't beat the price - it's free!!! 

Bob Batton - TX District 7 Umpire Consultant (817-368-7033) RbrtBatton@sbcglobal.net



Wednesday, November 25
District 7 Local League Umpire-in-Chiefs

UIC's for each of the District 7 League's will be required  to attend the 2010 District 7 Umpire Clinic.  The clinic date is posted in this section.  Questions regarding why UIC's are required to attend should be directed to Bob Batton, D7 Umpire Consultant for Small Diamonds or to Jim Gildea, D7 Umpire Consultant for Large Diamonds.

Texas District 7 leagues utilizing paid umpires and/or do not have someone designated as an "Umpire-in-Chief" MUST send the most senior umpire for their local league to the District 7 Umpire Clinic.



Wednesday, November 25
TX District 7/Local League Umpire Appearance Requirements
All umpires officiating games for District 7 leagues must adhere to Little League Regulation/Rule requirements for equipment and appearance.   Umpire shirts or caps with patches or embroidery from other programs shall NOT be worn while officiating Little League games.  When parents are "volunteered" to umpire games, they should be provided with the necessary equipment to safely officiate the game and be provided a proper shirt / T-shirt designating that they are a Little League umpire.  Little League umpire patches are available from the Little League store on their website. 

Umpire Tips of the Month

Here are two tips that, properly followed, help to convince the teams and fans that the umpire is "on the ball."

Signaling the Count
It is not necessary to signal the count after every pitch, but it's a good ideal to do it verbally because it cements the count in your mind, thus preventing the embarrassment of an enthusiastic third strike call when in fact the pitch was strike two.

Regardless of the count, strikes are always indicated on the right hand, and balls are indicated on the left hand. A full count should be indicated by extending three fingers on the left hand and two fingers on the right hand.

When using the hands to signal the count, give it verbally too. The batter and catcher cannot see your hands and need to know the count as well.

Finding the Ball
Slide plays often produce a great deal of dust, obscuring your view of the ball. In those cases, you must find it before making the call.

If a runner has beaten the tag, it doesn't matter weather or not the defensive player has the ball and the runner should be called safe. If, however, you're certain the tag was made first but the ball cannot be seen, point to the defensive player and say, "Show me the ball!"

If the defensive player has the ball in his/her possession, sell the out with an enthusiastic pump of the arm and a loud "OUT!" call.

If, as the dirt clears or the defensive player shows you an empty mitt, a confident and demonstrative safe call is appropriate.

Do not ask the defensive player to see the ball if you're already sure the runner is safe. That conveys lack of confidence in your decision.  You should only ask to see the ball if the tag was properly applied but you cannot see it in the defensive player's glove.

Volunteer Umpire Tips
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Here are a few tips that the most skilled of umpires follow, but are easy to adopt by even a novice official.
Don’t shout out obvious calls. In particular, don’t scream out, “Strike three,” when the batter swings and misses. You don’t like being shown up and neither do batters. Everyone in the ballpark saw the play, so just make an almost nonchalant strike three gesture as the batter heads back to the dugout after a swinging strikeout.

Don’t grant every defensive player’s request for time. If a player wants time, simply to ensure his/her return throw to the pitcher cannot result in runners advancing, you are within your rights not to grant time. Also, remember not to call time until you’re sure playing action has ceased. Too many umpires have granted time only to turn around and see a runner streaking for the next base. You’ll have a hard time explaining to a manager why his/her runner’s advance has been nullified because the shortstop needed time to tie his/her shoe.

Take off your mask only when necessary. If you peel off your mask, follow the flight of every foul ball, wait for it to hit the ground, then give the catcher a new ball and put your mask back on, you’ll find yourself working a lot of long games. If the ball is so obviously foul that the catcher doesn’t even come out of his/her crouch, keep your mask on, give him/her a baseball/softball and get play moving again.

Talk the talk. You’ve heard the expression, “When in Rome, do what the Romans do.” The same holds true around a ballpark. If you look, act and talk like you belong there, you’ll have a better chance of being accepted by the managers and coaches.



Where are all the volunteer umpires?
Every year local leagues have elections, organizational meetings, registrations, drafts, etc.. Then, a week before the season starts someone asks, “What about umpires?”

Below are some items leagues should think about in building a viable volunteer umpire program. The information provided will give each league a way to build a successful volunteer umpire program: From the need to have a league umpire-in-chief on the board of directors to how to keep them once you get them in the program and trained to be efficient, competent umpires.

Local League Umpire-In-Chief
It is highly recommended that each league should have a League umpire-in-chief (UIC) on its board of directors.

This umpire-in-chief should be, as a minimum, a role model to the children, and should have basic rule knowledge as well as being able to recruit, teach or train volunteer umpires and interpret rules.

His/her duties should be to:

  • Train new umpires and/or managers/coaches for base umpires.
  • Schedule umpires in all or most divisions of league play and should umpire as well.
  • Establish a dress code for the volunteer umpires that will be umpiring in the local league.
  • Interface with the local league board of directors as it relates to game situation, manager/coach situations, etc.
  •  Be available to debrief after games if asked by those volunteer umpires that want an evaluation.

Local League Umpire Program
The local league must have a member of the board of directors at games to ensure safety, sportsmanship and game control when required.

Make a prepared announcement before games that unsportsmanlike conduct from players, managers/coaches, and fans will not be tolerated.



Recruiting Umpires
If you live near a military base or post, approach military personnel about volunteering a little of their time to umpire some games for your league. Military personnel are always looking for community involvement activities to list on their fitness reports or on their annual evaluations.

Contact other associations, such as fire departments, search and rescues, etc. Those type of community based organizations can and sometimes will be able to put you in contact with some volunteers who are willing to umpire.

Create a code of conduct for all players, managers, coaches and fans that will remove some pressures from the volunteer umpires. Have parents, manages, coaches and players sign the code of conduct

When umpire meetings are scheduled, ask all those who plan to attend to bring someone along with them, especially a manager/coach.

A league may chose to use manages and or coaches to umpire in divisions in which they do not manager or coach. If the local league chooses to use managers/coaches, they should umpire with a qualified umpire.

Each team should recruit one or two parents to umpire.

Many local newspapers will offer public service advertisements to youth groups. Many radio stations and TV stations have avenues for public announcements for non-profit organizations. The local leagues should contact these venues and advertise the need for volunteer umpires, clinic dates, etc.

During the local league registration periods, volunteer forms are used to ask parents and others what they would volunteer to do to help the league. Make sure the UIC or board member personally ask those who volunteer to umpire and get a possible commitment from that individual. The UIC should attend these registration periods in uniform whenever possible and try to put together a CALL list from the volunteers that attend.

Many high schools around the country require their students to perform some type of community service before they are allowed to graduate. Get the UIC or board member to the high school and interact with the guidance counselors to get names of those who may be willing to help with umpiring.

Use basketball, football or other sport officials. While attending a game at a high school event or another sport event contact the officials after the game and ask them if they would be willing to give to the Little League program one or two nights a week.


Training, Training, Training
Use the district umpire consultant to offer and schedule clinics during the pre-season. Districts can also “share” district umpire consultants to conduct clinics in neighboring districts. The old saying of an expert is anyone who lives fifty miles away is very true and gives the local umpires a new prospective and creates additional interest. It also reinforces everything the local district umpire consultant has been saying in his/her clinics.

The UIC can video tape games, to help as a training aid for both new and old umpires. The theory is that you can’t hide from the camera.

Use pre-game, in-game, and post-game critiques as a training tool. However, you must be careful how you present critiques. Often you can run into someone who doesn’t understand constructive criticism or doesn’t want to hear criticism of any kind.

Develop a mentor program where senior or more experienced umpires umpire with those that are less experienced.

Conduct rules training in multiple sessions, not just a two hour session, and include managers/coaches in those training sessions. Advertise your training sessions to everyone, not just umpires. Managers/coaches will be surprised how much strategy they can learn from the rules of the game.

Also, offer training on field mechanics to include plate mechanics as well as base mechanics. More than one volunteer umpire has left the program because of being out of position and getting a call wrong.

Utilize Little League manuals, books, magazines, etc., for those training sessions.

Use e-mail/website to disseminate rules questions/answers, and develop an Internet-based training program. Use of e-mail will eliminate a lot of telephone calls when it comes to unexpected holes in game assignments.

If the local league decides to utilize parents as umpires, make sure each team provides two parents as umpires as a minimum and give them shirts and hats to wear while they umpire.

Umpires must be reasonable, and not the type of individual with a chip on their shoulders. They should understand how to deal with other volunteers and, most importantly, how to deal with children.

Expand the use of your umpires, exposing more of them to more games during the course of the regular season.

An umpire training fund should be started by the local league or district to send those volunteer umpires who desire more training to go to Williamsport or one of the regions for weekend or weeklong training.

Ask managers for input on their thoughts about any players who may want to be umpires.

Fall umpire meetings should be scheduled to keep your volunteers interested and abreast of the latest changes in rules, league policies, to organize for spring, etc.

Be a friend to your umpires or other umpires. More than one game has been a bad experience for an umpire, and it’s always nice to have someone to talk with about the situation.

Develop some type of three-year or five-year award, such as a pin, for umpires, and give it to them at closing ceremonies or end of the season banquets, picnics, etc.

If your league has been selected to host upper level tournaments, i.e., sections, states, etc., don’t just use host umpires during tournament. Invite umpires from neighboring districts to give others an opportunity to work in these great games.

Conduct local seminars on what it takes to be a volunteer Little League umpire and ask those in attendance to get involved just one or two nights a week.

Inform all that are involved that you will ensure that they will be assigned to some tournament games. This incentive is sometimes very exciting for the volunteer umpires.

Establish a reward or recognition program such as: The Rhino Award, given to the volunteer umpire with thick skin; The Golden Boot Award for the least amount of calls that were not correct during a season (humor award); and The Iron Man Award for the most games umpired in a season.

Keep new umpires’ costs down by supplying some or all the equipment they need. Don’t make them buy a bunch of equipment and uniforms at the beginning of their career.

Contact the local schools to get on community involvement lists that are provided to the students to aid the student in completing their graduation requirements.



Retention
Provide rule books, patches, equipment, etc., for umpires. Start with a community set of equipment that everyone uses. Then progress to those that return or agree to umpire so many games will get a mask, more games will get a chest protector, etc.

Provide every volunteer a league umpire shirt and umpire hat to wear when they umpire. This will go along way in establishing loyalties and ties with your league.

Acknowledge umpires at end of year through dinners, picnics, or get together after the season for awards, show of appreciation, etc. Recognize your umpires….make them feel important!

Move umpires up, meaning use them for tournament games in at least district play, utilizing different umpires in championship games from year to year.

District UIC should approach each league to ascertain who is available for tournament games and what their availability actually will be as far as travel, open nights, etc.

Leagues, districts and umpires should understand that they should continue training. Rules change; interpretations change, mechanics change and everyone should realize this and conduct training or get to sessions for those updates.

Little League umpire shirts with the name of the league on them or just a shirt with a patch and Little League above the pocket will pay dividends on retaining umpires in your program.

Keep your foot in the door during the winter. Make contact at least monthly with your volunteer umpires.

On the local league web site, have an umpire section. On this section list schedules, rule interpretations, questions and answers and have a feedback area just for umpires, and talk to each other about weird plays or situations.

Local leagues should implement guidelines and procedures for keeping managers and coaches under control.

Ensure that your concession stand workers understand that it is permissible to allow volunteer umpires concessions after the game. Give them the hot dog and soda treatment after a game with a big smile and heartfelt “Thank you!”

Set up a program where volunteer umpires work at different leagues during regular season to keep them interested and to share the wealth with each other. An umpire who works in just one league can get stale and develop bad habits that he/she doesn’t realize he/she is developing. Also, try to umpire with different partners during the season. By umpiring in other leagues it will sometimes force that umpire to concentrate more on proper mechanics and make him/her a better umpire.

Recognize the umpires’ families. Say “thank you” to the spouse for encouraging the umpire to get involved and to be away from home four, five or six nights a week. The umpires will appreciate the support.


 



Tuesday, February 19
Yahoo Groups for Umpire

There is a local umpire group located on Yahoo...associated with the Arlington Little League Umpire Association.  The umpires meet weekly...on Saturday mornings during the spring season...and every other week for training opportunities.  For information, contact Bob Batton, at (817) 368-7033.  

Join the following email group--llumpires is an group that has Little League Umpires from all over the country.  The LLUmpires group frequently has discussion strings regarding the sticky rules or regulations...many times the emails can be fairly entertaining too!!

Click to join llumpires



 


Tuesday, February 19
Why Does the CatcherÂ’s Throat Protector Have to Dangle?

This photo depicts the proper wear of the “dangling” throat protector, as required in all levels of Little League Baseball and Softball. Notice the catcher is wearing a mask that includes the wire extension. If the catcher in the photo were to lift his head up, the wire extension would move up with the mask, exposing the throat – if not for the “dangling” throat protector, which would remain in a down position.

By Andy Konyar -Little League International Umpire-in-Chief

It appears that over the course of this past season that there has been a lot of confusion over Rule 1.17.

The section I am referring to is the safety requirement that all catchers MUST have a "dangling" type throat protector attached to the mask of the catcher's helmet. We have observed catcher's helmets without any type of "dangling" throat protector, as well as throat protectors secured so tightly to the lower frame bar that they cannot move or "dangle" to protect the catcher's throat. We have observed them secured so that the throat protector is sticking straight out at a 90-degree angle, providing no protection for the catcher's throat area.

All of these are totally unacceptable.

The "dangling" throat protector should be properly and securely attached so that when the catcher looks up or his/her head is tilted upward that the throat protector will be able to remain down so that the catcher's throat area has some protection. A ball (from a foul or from a pitch in the dirt) or even a bat could possibly come up under the catcher's helmet and cause a severe injury.

To be properly attached, the “dangling” type throat protector should be securely attached from one-fourth of an inch to no more than three-fourths of an inch below the lowest bar or frame of the catchers mask. The throat protector should swing freely and smoothly under the mask when tapped with a finger while holding the catcher's mask/helmet in the hand.

The "dangling" style throat protector is required on any and all types of catchers’ helmets/masks in all divisions of Little League Baseball and Softball. So whether you have the standard frame, the extended frame, the hockey style, etc., the "dangling" throat protector is required.

Yes, even on the extended frame masks – because when a catcher tilts his/her head upward, the frame goes with it – exposing the throat. That is, unless there is a properly positioned “dangling” throat protector in place.

This is a mandatory safety requirement and MUST be strictly enforced at all times by managers, coaches, league officials and umpires. There is NO reason or excuse, (and we have heard them all) for not having a properly attached "dangling" throat protector on all catcher's helmets/mask. The children's safety and well being MUST always be foremost in all that we do in Little League.

It is not worth the risk.

So, PLEASE, help us to make sure that every catcher's helmet/mask in your league’s equipment (whether league-purchased or parent-purchased) has a properly attached "dangling" style throat protector to protect the children from any injury or harm.

A note for the umpires out there: It is not a requirement for the plate umpire to wear a "dangling" throat protector, but it is very strongly recommended that they do.
For more information contact Little League International