Professionalism
"What do you mean professionalism;
When I'm talking about professionalism, I am talking about:
Attitude or better
described as a confidence and
knowledge that should be carried by
all umpires.. This confidence ISN'T
arrogance, it is a confidence
in knowing that when
you walk onto that field, you are there to do a job as defined by your rule book and to
enforce your rules as defined by common sense, the spirit of those rules, and
interpretation of those rules by your case book.
As an umpire you have one of the least forgiving, least understood and most
under-appreciated jobs in the world. You must
be prepared, before you walk onto that field,
for anything to happen, and expect that anything to happen on every pitch.
Being a true professional prepares you for that.
The two items that compose this
professionalism are knowledge and confidence.
A basic knowledge is required to umpire
baseball period, but a true knowledge of
umpiring lies a complete understanding of the rules, correct positioning, and
proper mechanics.
1. An understanding of the rules
is probably the easiest cornerstone of umpiring to grasp. Begin with
a basic knowledge and expand it. Read 10
pages of your rule book a day during baseball season. It takes ten minutes, and
will expand your comprehension
of the rules enormously.
2. Correct positioning is in the
simplest terms, angle and distance. Understand that having a proper
angle is more important that being five feet from the play. Most umpires use two-man
mechanics and it isn't possible to be standing directly behind the bag to make
each call. Know where you need to be, get a good angle,
see the play, and make the call.
3. Proper mechanics allow you as an umpire
to correctly communicate with your partner,
and to allow your self as an umpire to be in
the best possible position to see the play. Proper two-man
mechanics get you in correct position, and lets the rest fall into place.
The confidence portion of professionalism is really the part of umpiring
that you won't find in the rule book. This
confidence allows you to deal with
situations that don't normally occur, and to best handle outlying factors
during a game. Utilizing these six keys will
make the greatest difference in your ability to umpire effectively.
1. Get the call right!
If you have to sell the call, then you probably didn't get the call right. I
don't like hearing from association presidents "if all else fails, sell
the call." It is better to stop and discuss the situation with
your partner, and even get the rule book out if necessary, and ultimately get
the call right, then to decide something on the fly and have it come back to
bite you in the end. Our job as
umpires is to be the final authority during a baseball game, and that requires
for you to get the call correct at all costs. Use your keys of
understanding the rules, correct positioning and proper mechanics to put you in
the best frame of mind and best position to make the call and to get it right.
2. Competitiveness
Accept the fact the every player
is giving their maximum effort, you should too. Being lazy will
let the game slip away from you. As an umpire
you have to be willing to call the first pitch
of the game the same way you call the last
pitch of the game. If you don't, you’re going to be in trouble. Realize that every pitch means something
to someone on that field and it should be important to you also. That
0-2 pitch, in the bottom of the fifth inning, that is low
and outside may mean you get to go home if you call it a strike, but it may be
the only at bat this player gets all month long. If you call a strike because
you want to go home, you have done yourself
and those players a disservice; you should have found somebody else to do the
game for you. That pitch is important to that player, and it should be
important to you.
3. Every blue shirt doesn't come with a license for respect
Just because you wear an umpire uniform doesn't mean you
deserve respect. You don't deserve anything until you earn it. If you walk
onto the field with the attitude that no
matter what you call you are always
right, then you do deserve something. You deserve to have that manager stapled
to back riding you the entire game. Earn
your respect with confidence, your knowledge of the rule, correct positioning,
and proper mechanics.
4. Don't be afraid to answer questions
Answer all reasonable questions with reasonable answers. If a manager has a
reasonable question, then tell him why you
made the call the way you did. Don't
allow a manager to use this chew
on you, but use it as a tool to diffuse a situation and regain the confidence
of players and managers. Remember, if
you don't give a reasonable answer
your not going to get a reasonable response.
5. Don't be the judge, jury and executioner
Your job is to umpire the game,
not to pass judgment on individuals. Some players may not be the most
outstanding of individuals, but don't let that distract you from what
your job is. Accept the players for what they are, baseball players, and do your job, umpire the game.
Control the game as necessary, and never pass judgment on players.
6. Most importantly, leave the
game on the field!
Once the last strike is called,
leave the baseball game on the field. Use the situations that happened
during the game to make you a better umpire by going back and reading your rule
book or asking another umpire, but that is as far as it goes. Managers that ate
you up during that game are just regular people outside the diamond, as are
you. Don't let a situation that occurred during
the game relive itself somewhere
else. Decide how the situation could have been handled
better, learn from it, and let it go.
If you, as an umpire, can combine all these elements into your job, that is
when you are a professional. We all have fell short at one time or another
during a baseball game, but use those situations and these keys to continually
improve as an umpire, and each time
you walk onto the field think of yourself as
a professional and your job as an umpire will become one that continually is
filled with satisfaction.