Showing posts with label Tim Timmons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Timmons. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2022

MLB-High 10 Umpires Retire During 2022-2023 Off-Season

It's official—10 Major League Baseball umpires have retired following the 2022 season, a record-high for the unified MLB era and most since 1999, when a failed contract strategy led to 22 resignations. Seven crew chiefs and three 'number twos' won't return in 2023, opening the door to call-up umpires looking for a full-time job as well as current backup chiefs looking for a permanent promotion to that role. This retiring class combined for 261 years of on-field Major League experience.

The retirements of Greg Gibson (10/6/22), Tom Hallion (12/8/22), and Jim Reynolds (12/21/22) were previously disclosed by the indivual umpires prior to this announcement of all 10 retirements.

Retirements, Listed as Name, Service Time (Seasons with 1+ games)
- Postseason & total ejection stats listed on following lines:

Ted Barrett, 26 Years (29 Seasons AL/MLB [1994-2022]): Crew Chief with 3,400 regular season games.
6 Wild Cards (2012, 13, 15, 16, 20, 22)
- 12 Division Series (2000, 01, 02, 03, 06, 07, 11, 14, 17, 18, 19, 21)
- 10 League Championship Series (2005, 08, 09, 10, 12, 13, 15, 16, 20, 22)
- 5 World Series (2007, 11, 14, 18, 21)
> 65 MLB ejections

Greg Gibson, 24 Years (25 Seasons NL/MLB [1997-2019, 2021-22]): Crew Chief with 2,746 games.
- 3 Wild Cards (2012, 13, 18)
- 10 Division Series (2001, 03, 04, 06, 07, 09, 10, 11, 15, 21)
- 5 League Championship Series (2005, 12, 13, 14, 18)
- 1 World Series (2011)
> 92 MLB ejections

Marty Foster, 24 Years (27 Seasons AL/MLB [1996-2022]): Number Two with 2,745 games.
- 1 Wild Card (2020)
- 3 Division Series (2006, 08, 17)
> 110 MLB ejections

Tom Hallion, 30 Years (32 Seasons NL/MLB [1985-99, 2005-19, 2021-22]): Crew Chief w 3,645 games.
- 10 Division Series (1996, 97, 2008, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 21)
- 5 League Championship Series (1998, 2007, 09, 10, 11)
- 2 World Series (2008, 21)
> 102 MLB ejections

Sam Holbrook, 22½ Years (22 Seasons A/NL/MLB [1996-99, 2002-19, 2021]): Crew Chief w 2,423 games.
- 1 Wild Card (2012)
- 7 Division Series (2005, 07, 10, 13, 16, 19, 21)
- 4 League Championship Series (2008, 09, 11, 12)
- 3 World Series (2010, 16, 19)
> 78 MLB ejections

Jerry Meals, 26 Years (31 Seasons NL/MLB [1992-2022]): Crew Chief with 3,303 games.
- 3 Wild Cards (2020, 21, 22)
- 9 Division Series (1999, 2004, 05, 09, 10, 11, 14, 19, 20)
- 3 League Championship Series (2008, 17, 21)
- 2 World Series (2014, 20)
> 61 MLB ejections

Paul Nauert, 22½ Years (24 Years NL/MLB [1995-99, 2002-20]): Number Two with 2,450 games.
- 1 Wild Card (2020)
- 6 Division Series (2004, 08, 10, 13, 14, 17)
- 1 League Championship Series (2016)
- 1 World Series (2017)
> 33 MLB ejections

Jim Reynolds, 22½ Years (24 Years AL/MLB [1999-2022]): Crew Chief with 2,815 games.
- 3 Wild Cards (2015, 17, 20)
- 7 Division Series (2005, 07, 08, 12, 13, 14, 18)
- 5 League Championship Series (2010, 15, 16, 17, 20)
- 2 World Series (2014, 18)
> 43 MLB ejections

Tim Timmons, 22½ Years (23 Years NL/MLB [1999-2021]): Number Two with 2,746 games.
- 2 Wild Cards (2013, 20)
- 3 Division Series (2005, 09, 18)
- 4 League Championship Series (2011, 14, 15, 20)
- 1 World Series (2018)
> 90 MLB ejections

Bill Welke, 22½ Years (24 Years AL/MLB [1999-2022]): Crew Chief with 2,816 games.
- 3 Wild Cards (2014, 16, 20)
- 6 Division Series (2003, 06, 08, 11, 15, 20)
- 4 League Championship Series (2014, 16, 17, 19)
- 1 World Series (2015)
> 102 MLB ejections

Video as follows:

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Tim Timmons Orders O's Grounds Crew Off the Field

Although "umpire ejects grounds crew" might be an attention-grabbing headline, Crew Chief Tim Timmons' order for Baltimore's tarp crew to exit the field during play Wednesday vs New York was actually an invocation of Official Baseball Rule 8.01(e) regarding umpire qualifications and authority.

To review, Timmons noticed Baltimore's grounds crew had gathered behind the on-field tarp during a 9th inning Replay Review and, despite impending rain, directed the crew to leave the playing field.

The umpire's authority for such a call is found in OBR 8.01(e), which states, "Each umpire has authority at their discretion to eject from the playing field (1) any person whose duties permit their presence on the field, such as ground crew members, ushers, photographers, newsmen, broadcasting crew members, etc., and (2) any spectator or other person not authorized to be on the playing field."

As for the why of Timmons' decision, the answer is twofold: player/staff safety and interference.

The sheer number of people that staged and crouched behind the tarp, on the field, created a potential hazard. For instance, if a ball were to have been hit toward the tarp, or, moreover, a player attempted to make a play at the tarp, the assembled Orioles grounds crew would have no means of escape from their positions. This means that a generally brilliant diving play by an outfielder at the tarp would instead likely result in injury, either to the player and/or grounds crew.

With the proven athleticism of MLB players, this remained a key possibility.

The other concern is interference wherein a ball that might usually bounce into and out of the tarp area might instead connect with a grounds crew staffer and get stuck. This likely would be unintentional interference to be sure, but given the option of potential unintentional interference or no interference, the preference is clear.

Finally, as for the inclement weather concern, the rain fell in Baltimore for nary a few minutes after which it let up: by the time Yankees pitcher Aroldis Chapman recorded the final strikeout of the night several outs after the tarp event, it was not raining anymore.

Video as follows:

Sunday, July 25, 2021

MLB Ejections 114-115 - Tim Timmons (2-3; TEX x2)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Rangers 3B Brock Holt and manager Chris Woodward (strike three call; QOCN) in the top of the 5th inning of the #Rangers-#Astros game. With none out and none on, Rangers batter Brock Holt took a 1-2 slider from Astros pitcher Zack Greinke for a called third strike. Replays indicate the pitch was located off the outer edge of home plate and thigh-high (px -0.97, pz 2.26), the call was incorrect.* At the time of the ejections, the game was tied, 0-0. The Astros ultimately won the contest, 3-1.

These are Tim Timmons (95)'s 2nd and 3rd ejections of 2021.
Tim Timmons now has 2 points in the UEFL Standings (4 Prev + 2 MLB - 4 Incorrect Call = 2).
Crew Chief Alfonso Marquez now has 9 points in Crew Division (9 Previous + 0 QOCN = 9).
*UEFL Rule 6-2-b-1 (Kulpa Rule): |0| < STRIKE < |.748| < BORDERLINE < |.914| < BALL.
This pitch was located 0.67 horizontal inches from being deemed correct.

These are the 114th and 115th ejection reports of the 2021 MLB regular season.
This is the 43rd player ejection of 2021. Prior to ejection, Holt was 0-2 (SO) in the contest.
This is the 56th manager ejection of 2021.
This is Texas' 3/4th ejection of 2021, T-1st in the AL West (OAK, TEX 4; LAA 3; SEA 2).
This is Brock Holt's 1st ejection since July 25, 2019 (DJ Reyburn; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Chris Woodward's 2nd ejection of 2021, 1st since May 2 (Brian O'Nora; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Tim Timmons' 2/3rd ejection of 2021, 1st since June 22 (Joe Girardi; QOC = U [USC-NEC]).

Wrap: Texas Rangers vs. Houston Astros, 7/25/21 | Video as follows:

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

MLB Ejection 080 - Tim Timmons (1; Joe Girardi)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Phillies manager Joe Girardi (unsportsmanlike/challenging Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer to a fight after a foreign substance dispute) in the bottom of the 5th inning of the #Nationals-#Phillies game. In the 4th, with none out and one on (R1), Phillies batter Alec Bohm struck out swinging. Following the at-bat, Girardi requested the umpires inspect Scherzer for an illegal substance. Upon crew consultation, the umpires checked Scherzer and did not appear to find an illegal substance; at the time of inspection, Scherzer had already been checked twice before pursuant to MLB's June 2021 between-inning inspection protocol. The game proceeded without incident until the bottom of the 5th inning, when, with two out and none on, Phillies batter JP Realmuto struck out swinging. As Scherzer walked off the mound toward Washington's dugout, he looked at Philadelphia's dugout but did not say anything. In response, Girardi exited Philadelphia's dugout and yelled in the direction of the Nationals dugout, resulting in an ejection for unsportsmanlike conduct, the call was irrecusable. At the time of the ejection, the Nationals were leading, 3-1. The Nationals ultimately won the contest, 3-2.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s 2nd ejection of 2021.
Tim Timmons now has 4 points in the UEFL Standings (2 Prev + 2 MLB + 0 Irrecusable Call = 4).
Crew Chief Alfonso Marquez now has 3 points in Crew Division (2 Previous + 1 QOCU = 3).

This is the 80th ejection report of the 2021 MLB regular season.
This is the 42nd manager ejection of 2021.
This is Philadelphia's 5th ejection of 2021, 1st in the NL East (PHI 5; NYM 4; MIA, WAS 2; ATL 0).
This is Joe Girardi's 2nd ejection of 2021, 1st since April 28 (Chris Segal; QOC = U [Warnings]).
This is Tim Timmons' 2nd ejection of 2021, 1st since April 12 (Don Mattingly; QOC = N-c [Replay Review]).

Wrap: Washington Nationals vs. Philadelphia Phillies, 6/22/21 | Video as follows:

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

2021 No-Hitter 3, Tim Timmons (1, John Means)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons called Baltimore Orioles pitcher John Means' no-hitter against the Mariners in Seattle Wednesday afternoon, joined by 1B Umpire Carlos Torres, Crew Chief Alfonso Marquez at second base, and 3B Umpire Lance Barrett.

Timmons saw a total of 249 pitches in his first career no-hitter, of which 110 were callable.

In accordance with UEFL tradition, the following are umpire Timmons' three plate scores, including a 96.4% (106/110) performance under ML Private/Zone Evaluation Equivalent conditions, 92.7% (102/110) UEFL f/x score, and 87.3% (96/110) value for ML Public / the broadcast-facing zero error system.

The UEFL f/x look:
Balls: 70 called balls outside strike zone / 4 called balls within strike zone = 70/74 = 94.6% accuracy.
Strikes: 32 called strikes within strike zone / 4 called strike outside strike zone = 32/36 = 88.9% accuracy.
Total Raw Accuracy Score for Timmons = 102/110 = 92.7% accuracy (+2 BAL/skew favored Orioles).

Monday, April 12, 2021

MLB Ejection 009 - Tim Timmons (1; Don Mattingly)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Marlins Manager Don Mattingly (Replay Review call that overturned 2B Umpire Alfonso Marquez's safe call to an out; QOCU) in the top of the 8th inning of the #Marlins-#Braves game. With none out and one on (R1), Marlins baserunner R1 Jon Berti attempted to steal second base, sliding head-first into second as Braves catcher Alex Jackson's throw to shortstop Dansby Swanson arrived at second base, ruled an out by 2B Umpire Marquez and overturned as the result of a Manager's Challenge by Braves Manager Brian Snitker. Replays fail to conclusively indicate whether Berti's hand made contact with second base before or after Swanson's glove tagged Berti, the call to overturn Marquez was incorrect. Play was reviewed and affirmed by the UEFL Appeals Board (8-0), the call was incorrect. At the time of the ejection, the Braves were leading, 3-1. The Marlins ultimately won the contest, 5-3.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s 1st ejection of 2021.
Tim Timmons now has 0 points in the UEFL Standings (0 Prev + 2 MLB - 2 Incorrect-Crewmate = 0).
Crew Chief Alfonso Marquez now has 0 points in Crew Division (0 Previous + 0 Incorrect Call = 0).

This is the ninth ejection report of the 2021 MLB regular season.
This is the fourth manager ejection of 2021.
This is Miami's 1st ejection of 2021, 1st in the NL East (MIA 1; ATL, MIA, NYM, PHI 0).
This is Don Mattingly's 1st ejection since August 16, 2020 (James Hoye; QOC = N [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Tim Timmons' 1st ejection since August 16, 2020 (Ron Gardenhire; QOC = Y [Boundary]).

Wrap: Miami Marlins vs. Atlanta Braves, 4/12/21 | Video as follows:

Sunday, August 16, 2020

MLB Ejections 19-20 - Timmons, Reyburn (2, 1; DET)

1B Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Tigers Manager Ron Gardenhire (stadium boundary/base award for ball stuck in wall; QOCY) in the bottom of the 3rd and HP Umpire DJ Reyburn ejected Tigers batter Cameron Maybin in the bottom of the 5th inning of the #Indians-#Tigers game. With two out and one on (R1), Tigers batter Jeimer Candelario hit a 2-2 fastball from Indians pitcher Adam Plutko on a line drive to right field, where the ball bounced stuck to the base of the outfield wall, ruled a stuck ball pursuant to Official Baseball Rule 5.06(b)(4)(F) by Timmons. Replays indicate the ball rolled to the wall and became stationary by the obstruction caused by the padding protruding from the wall and gap left between the base of the padding and dirt warning track, the call was correct.* Play was reviewed and affirmed by the UEFL Appeals Board, the call was correct. At the time of Gardenhire's ejection, the game was tied, 3-3.

In the 5th, with one out and two on (R1, R2), Maybin took a 0-1 slider from Indians pitcher Oliver Perez for a called first strike before grounding into an inning-ending double play. Replays indicate the pitch was located over the outer edge of home plate and below the hollow of the knee (px 0.88, pz 1.45 [sz_bot 1.68 / RAD 1.56 / MOE 1.48]), the call was incorrect.* At the time of Maybin's ejection, the game was tied, 4-4. The Indians ultimately won the contest, 8-5.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s second ejection of 2020.
This is DJ Reyburn (17)'s first ejection of 2020.
Tim Timmons now has 8 points in the UEFL Standings (4 Prev + 2 MLB + 2 Correct Call = 8).
DJ Reyburn now has -2 points in the UEFL Standings (0 Prev + 2 MLB - 4 Incorrect Call = -2).
Crew Chief Laz Diaz now has 1 point in Crew Division (0 Previous + 1 QOCY + 0 QOCN = 1).
*Rule 5.06(b)(4)(F) states, "Each runner including the batter-runner may, without liability to be put out, advance—two bases, if a fair ball bounces or is deflected into the stands outside the first or third base foul lines; or if it goes through or under a field fence, or through or under a scoreboard, or through or under shrubbery or vines in the fence; or if it sticks in such fence, scoreboard, shrubbery or vines."
RelatedMLB Ejection 085 - Fieldin Culbreth (3; Bryan Price) (6/29/17).
RelatedCause You're Stuck in the Wall - Batted Ball Out of Play (9/20/16).

These are the 19th and 20th ejection reports of the 2020 MLB regular season.
This is the eighth Manager ejection of 2020.
This is the ninth player ejection of 2020. Prior to ejection, Maybin was 0-1 in the contest.
This is Detroit's 1/2nd ejection of 2020, 1st in the AL Central (DET 2; CLE, CWS, KC, MIN 0).
This is Ron Gardenhire's 1st ejection since August 19, 2019 (Alfonso Marquez; QOC = U [NEC]).
This is Tim Timmons' 2nd ejection of 2020, 1st since Aug 12 (Willson Contreras; QOC = Y [Check Swing]).

Wrap: Cleveland Indians vs. Detroit Tigers, 8/16/20 | Video as follows:

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

MLB Ejection 16 - Tim Timmons (1; Willson Contreras)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Cubs C Willson Contreras (check swing strike three call) in the top of the 5th inning of the #Cubs-#Indians game. With none out and two on (R2, R3), Contreras attempted to check his swing on a 0-2 slider from Indians pitcher Carlos Carrasco, ruled a swinging strike by HP Umpire Timmons. Play was reviewed and adjudicated by the UEFL Appeals Board, the call on the field of "swing" was correct. At the time of the ejection, the Cubs were leading, 1-0. The Cubs ultimately won the contest, 7-2.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s first ejection of 2020.
Tim Timmons now has 4 points in the UEFL Standings (0 Prev + 2 MLB + 2 QOCY = 4).
Crew Chief Laz Diaz now has 0 points in Crew Division (-1 Previous + 1 Correct Call = 0).

This is the 16th ejection report of the 2020 MLB regular season.
This is the seventh player ejection of 2020. Prior to ejection, Contreras was 0-3 (2 SO) in the contest.
This is Chicago's 1st ejection of 2020, T-2nd in the NL Central (PIT 2; CHC, CIN 1; MIL, STL 0).
This is Willson Contreras' 1st ejection since August 24, 2019 (Hunter Wendelstedt; QOC = U [USC]).
This is Tim Timmons' 1st ejection since Sept 13, 2019 (Tim Bogar; QOC = Y [Check Swing]).

Wrap: Chicago Cubs vs. Cleveland Indians, 8/12/20 | Video as follows:

Friday, September 13, 2019

MLB Ejection 198 - Tim Timmons (3; Tim Bogar)

1B Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Nationals 1B Coach Tim Bogar (check swing strike two call) in the bottom of the 8th inning of the #Braves-#Nationals game. With one out and one on (R2), Nationals batter Howie Kendrick attempted to check his swing on a 2-1 fastball from Braves pitcher Shane Greene, ruled a ball by HP Umpire Rob Drake and a swinging strike on appeal by 1B Umpire Timmons, before grounding out. On-Field Ruling was reviewed and adjudicated by the UEFL Appeals Board (8-0), the call was correct. At the time of the ejection, the Braves were leading, 5-0. The Braves ultimately won the contest, 5-0.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s third ejection of 2019.
Tim Timmons now has 9 points in the UEFL Standings (5 Prev + 2 MLB + 2 Correct Call = 9).
Crew Chief Tim Timmons now has 6 points in Crew Division (5 Previous + 1 Correct Call = 9).

This is the 198th ejection report of the 2019 MLB regular season.
This is Washington's 10th ejection of 2019, 1st in the NL East (WAS 10; PHI 7; ATL 6; MIA, NYM 5).
This is Tim Bogar's first career MLB ejection.
This is Tim Timmons' 3rd ejection of 2019, 1st since Sept 1 (Yasmani Grandal; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).

Wrap: Atlanta Braves vs. Washington Nationals, 9/13/19 | Video as follows:

Sunday, September 1, 2019

MLB Ejection 183 - Tim Timmons (2; Yasmani Grandal)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Brewers C Yasmani Grandal (strike two/three call; QOCY) in the top of the 7th inning of the #Brewers-#Cubs game. With none out and none on, Grandal took 1-1 and 1-2 cutters from Cubs pitcher Kyle Ryan for called second and third strikes. Replays indicate the 1-1 pitch was located over the heart of home plate and at the midpoint (px 0.21, pz 1.45 [sz_bot 1.55 / RAD 1.43]) and the 1-2 pitch was located over the outer edge of home plate and above the hollow of the knee (px 0.73, pz 1.68 [sz_bot 1.55]), the call was correct.* At the time of the ejection, the Brewers were leading, 1-0. The Brewers ultimately won the contest, 4-0.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s second ejection of 2019.
Tim Timmons now has 6 points in the UEFL Standings (2 Prev + 2 MLB + 2 Correct Call = 6).
Crew Chief Tim Timmons now has 5 points in Crew Division (4 Previous + 1 QOCY = 5).
*UEFL Rule 6-2-b-1 (Kulpa Rule): |0| < STRIKE < |.748| < BORDERLINE < |.914| < BALL.
The 1-1 pitch was located 1.24 vertical inches from being deemed an incorrect call.
The 1-2 pitch was located 2.21 horizontal inches from being deemed an incorrect call.

This is the 183rd ejection report of the 2019 MLB regular season.
This is the 92nd player ejection of 2019. Prior to ejection, Grandal was 0-3 (2 SO) in the contest.
This is Milwaukee's 8th ejection of 2019, 3rd in the NL Central (CIN 22; PIT 10; MIL 8; CHC 7; STL 3).
This is Yasmani Grandal's 2nd ejection of 2019, 1st since July 15 (Jordan Baker; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Tim Timmons' 2nd ejection of 2019, 1st since May 1 (Bruce Bochy; QOC = N [Balls/Strikes]).

Wrap: Milwaukee Brewers vs. Chicago Cubs, 9/1/19 | Video as follows:

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

MLB Ejection 041 - Tim Timmons (1; Bruce Bochy)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Giants Manager Bruce Bochy (strike one call; QOCN) in the bottom of the 7th inning of the Dodgers-Giants game. With one out and none on, Giants batter Buster Posey took a 1-0 fastball from Dodgers pitcher Hyun-Jin Ryu for a called first strike. Replays indicate the pitch was located over the outer half of home plate and below the hollow of the knee (px 0.48, pz 1.33 [sz_bot 1.63 / RAD 1.507 / MOE 1.424]), the call was incorrect.* At the time of the ejection, the game was tied, 1-1. The Giants ultimately won the contest, 2-1.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s first ejection of 2019.
Tim Timmons now has -1 points in the UEFL Standings (1 Prev + 2 MLB - 4 Incorrect Call = -1).
Crew Chief Mike Winters now has 6 points in Crew Division (6 Previous + 0 Incorrect Call = 6).
*This pitch was located 1.128 vertical inches from being deemed a correct call.

This is the 41st ejection report of the 2019 MLB regular season.
This is the 18th Manager ejection of 2019.
This is San Francisco's 3rd ejection of 2019, 1st in the NL West (SF 3; ARI, COL, LAD, SD 1).
This is Bruce Bochy's 2nd ejection of 2019, 1st since April 18 (Ryan Additon; QOC = N [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Tim Timmons' first ejection since June 22, 2018 (Tommy Pham; QOC = N [Balls/Strikes]).

Wrap: Los Angeles Dodgers vs. San Francisco Giants, 5/1/19 | Video as follows:

Thursday, October 25, 2018

World Series Crew Embarks on Boston UMPS Care Visit

In the midst of a 2018 World Series assignment, Crew Chief Ted Barrett, and umpires Jeff Nelson, Jim Reynolds, and Tim Timmons made an UMPS CARE Charities BLUE for Kids visit to Boston Children's Hospital, joining Red Sox legends and MLB personnel on the charity outing just hours before Boston's 4-2 victory during Game 2.

World Series umpires visited Boston Children's.
While MLB donated video game-adorned Play Spaces, UMPS Care Charities stuck to its bread and butter, handing out 100 Build-A-Bear stuffed animal kits to critically-ill children on the heels of 1500 bears already distributed during UMPS CARE's 14 scheduled hospital visits during the 2018 regular season.

Barrett also let us in on a secret: "For most of us, this is our favorite event...we get more out of it I think than the kids do because we just have a blast with them... As umpires, usually, we're not bringing positive reactions, so it's great to get some smiles from people."

UMPS CARE (umpscare.com) recruits the home team's mascot whenever possible to help with the festivities, and Red Sox character Wally the Green Monster was on hand to help out, perhaps an apropos name on a day we remember the late, great Wally Bell, who once said of hospital visits, "To see the kids smile is the greatest thing in the world."
Related PostFive Years Later - Remembering Wally Bell (10/25/18).

Video as follows:

Monday, July 30, 2018

Comparison - Infield Interference or Only Obstruction?

A pair of similar-yet-seemingly oppositely-officiated plays occurred during this weekend's Nationals-Marlins and Dodgers-Braves series concerning the question of catcher obstruction (WAS-MIA) or batter interference (LA-ATL) on a batted ball in the vicinity of home plate.

Two similar plays met very different outcomes.
With both series' various broadcasters perplexed by the rulings from HP Umpire Tim Timmons (WAS-MIA obstruction) and Shane Livensparger (LAD-ATL interference)—not to mention a generous dose of "obstruction" vs "interference" terminology cross-contamination—the following analysis clarifies why the former was ruled obstruction and the latter interference.

In general, the following right-of-way rules apply:
On a batted ball, the fielder has the right to field it.*
At any other time, the runner has the right to run.

*Only one fielder is entitled to right-of-way protection.

In other words, the default condition for contact between fielder and runner is obstruction, unless the fielder is 1) actively attempting to field a batted ball and 2) receiving "protection" from the default condition of obstruction (e.g., determined to be the fielder entitled to the benefit of the rule).

Hint: We already discussed this exact issue earlier this year in both article and UEFL video form.

Related PostProtection Question - HS Obstruction on Fielding Catcher (5/22/18).

Related Video Analysis: Tangle/Untangle Between Batter-Runner and Catcher (UEFL)

Timmons ruled this Miami play obstruction.
The Play - Obstruction: With none out and one on (R1) in the bottom of the 10th inning of Saturday's Nationals-Marlins game, Marlins batter Miguel Rojas bunted a 1-0 fastball from Nats pitcher Kelvin Herrera in front of home plate, resulting in contact with catcher Spencer Kieboom as Kieboom ran toward the batted ball. HP Umpire Tim Timmons called catcher Kieboom for obstruction, awarding Rojas first base and forcing baserunner R1 Magneuris Sierra to advance to second base.

Rule - Obstruction: "OBSTRUCTION is the act of a fielder who, while not in possession of the ball and not in the act of fielding the ball, impedes the progress of any runner." (Definition of Terms). A batter-runner obstructed before he reaches first base on a ground ball or bunt to the infield is, by rule, an example of Obstruction Type 1/A (play being made on the runner at the time of obstruction...ball is dead, obstructed runner automatically awarded at least one base...6.01(h)(1)).

Livensparger ruled this ATL play interference.
The Play - Interference: With one out and one on (R1) in the bottom of the 2nd inning of Sunday's Dodgers-Braves game, Braves batter Sean Newcomb bunted a 1-0 fastball from Dodgers pitcher Ross Stripling in the air near home plate, resulting in contact with catcher Yasmani Grandal, attempting to field the ball. HP Umpire Shane Livensparger called batter-runner Newcomb for interference, awarding Grandal the air out and returning baserunner R1 Ender Inciarte to first base.

Rule - Interference: "Any runner is out when—he fails to avoid a fielder who is attempting to field a batted ball, or intentionally interferes with a thrown ball, provided that if two or more fielders attempt to field a batted ball, and the runner comes in contact with one or more of them, the umpire shall determine which fielder is entitled to the benefit of this rule, and shall not declare the runner out for coming in contact with a fielder other than the one the umpire determines to be entitled to field such a ball" (OBR 6.01(a)(10)).

Right-of-Way Protection: As 6.01(a)(10) specifies, only one fielder is entitled to the benefit or protection of the rule, known as right-of-way protection. Referring back to our right-of-way rules (batted ball = fielder; all else = runner), any fielder not given this protection may be said to not be in the "act of fielding a batted ball," insofar as the enforcement of 6.01(a)(10) is concerned.

Analysis, Obstruction (WAS-MIA): Earlier this year, we had an extremely similar play in Reagan High School's playoff game against Lake Travis when the plate umpire ruled that the catcher obstructed the runner when the two had contact up the first base line as the catcher pursued the batted ball (as did the pitcher) and the runner attempted to advance to first base.

It all goes back to this play from May.
The Reagan-Lake Travis play best represents what occurred with Timmons, who likely ruled the pitcher, and not the catcher, was entitled to right-of-way protection. As such, the unprotected catcher's collision with the runner constitutes obstrucion, for any unprotected player is said to not be in the "act of fielding," which means, pursuant to the aforementioned right-of-way rules, "the runner has the right to run."

Accordingly, Timmons' call is correct as long as the pitcher (not the catcher) is the protected fielder.

See the following related article concerning the Reagan-Lake Travis play for more information and analysis, as well as our Tangle/Untangle video that illustrates OBR 6.01(a) / NCAA 7-11f / NFHS 8-4-1.
Related PostProtection Question - HS Obstruction on Fielding Catcher (5/22/18).

Analysis, Interference (LAD-ATL): There exists a rather severe and inaccurate mythical belief that a batter-runner is protected from interference as long as the batter-runner remains in the batter's box. This is categorically false—the batter's box may shield the batter from interference insofar as running into a batted ball is concerned—but the box does not protect a batter-runner from his obligation to avoid a fielder who is attempting to field a batted ball, as in 6.01(a)(10)...if it did, then Rule 6.01(a)(10) would mention the batter's box. Obviously, it doesn't.

To reiterate, the batter's box is not a safe space. The batter-runner may still interfere with the catcher or any other fielder attempting to field a batted ball while standing within the batter's box, assuming the catcher (or other fielder) is the fielder entitled to right-of-way protection.

The only time the batter's box protects the batter against interference is when he fouls a pitch off of his body while still in a legal position within the box, or for consideration as to a catcher's attempted play or throw back to the pitcher (MLBUM interpretation of 6.03(a)(3)...see the following related post regarding HP Umpire Dale Scott's no-call on Blue Jays catcher Russell Martin's throw back to the pitcher during Game 5 of the 2015 ALDS vs Texas that hit batter Shin-Soo Choo's bat...in the box = live ball, out of the box = dead ball). That's it.
Related PostCarefree Throw, Extended Bat, and Blue Jays Protest (10/14/15).

Armbrister's tangle in the 1975 World Series.
Rule 6.01(a)(10) Comment provides further clarity: "When a catcher and batter-runner going to first base have contact when the catcher is fielding the ball, there is generally no violation and nothing should be called." This comment is also known as an Ed Armbrister tangle/untangle, named for Armbrister's 1975 World Series entanglement with Carlton Fisk that produced a "that's nothing" ruling from HP Umpire Larry Barnett.

The Armbrister tangle/untangle only applies in the immediate vicinity of home plate, only when the catcher is the protected fielder, and only when the batter-runner is going to first base.

As we noted in our Reagan-Lake Travis analysis—citing a 2011 interference call involving batter Matt Kemp when HP Umpire Dan Iassogna called Kemp for interfering with Angels catcher Hank Conger on a ground ball in front of home plate—if the batter is not "going to first base," then 6.01(a)(10)'s comment does not apply and the runner is guilty of interference by failing to avoid a protected fielder attempting to field a batted ball.

In other words, if the batter—like Newcomb—stands in the box without making any effort to run or satisfy the "going to first base" criterion, then the play is not an Armbrister tangle, and the batter is liable for interference if he hinders the protected catcher.

That's precisely what happened here, and why HP Umpire Livensparger correctly ruled interference.

Conclusion: These are two very similar plays ruled in very opposite ways, but both rulings are proper given the differences in A) Which fielder is entitled to right-of-way protection/benefit, and B) Whether or not the batter-runner was actually running toward first base.

Video as follows:

Friday, June 22, 2018

MLB Ejection 075 - Tim Timmons (3; Tommy Pham)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Cardinals CF Tommy Pham (strike three call; QOCN) in the top of the 1st inning of the Cardinals-Brewers game. With none out and one on (R3), Pham took a 2-2 fastball from Brewers pitcher Junior Guerra for a called third strike. Replays indicate the pitch was located off the inside edge of home plate and thigh-high (px -.935, pz 2.179 [sz_bot 1.565, sz_top 3.411]), the call was incorrect.* At the time of the ejection, the game was tied, 0-0. The Brewers ultimately won the contest, 2-1.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s third ejection of 2018.
Tim Timmons now has 2 points in the UEFL Standings (4 Prev + 2 MLB - 4 Incorrect Call = 2).
Crew Chief Mike Winters now has 0 points in Crew Division (0 Previous + 0 Incorrect Call = 0).
*UEFL Rule 6-2-b-1 (Kulpa Rule): |0| < STRIKE < |.748| < BORDERLINE < |.914| < BALL.
*This pitch was located 0.252 horizontal inches from being deemed a correct call.

This is the 75th ejection report of the 2018 MLB regular season.
This is the 39th player ejection of 2018. Prior to ejection, Pham was 0-1 (SO) in the contest.
This is St. Louis' 1st ejection of 2018, 4th in the NL Central (MIL 4; CHC 3; PIT 2; STL 1; CIN 0).
This is Tommy Pham's first career MLB ejection.
This is Tim Timmons' 3rd ejection of 2018, 1st since May 4 (Yonder Alonso; QOC = N [Balls/Strikes]).

Wrap: St. Louis Cardinals vs. Milwaukee Brewers, 6/22/18 | Video as follows:

Friday, May 4, 2018

MLB Ejection 030 - Tim Timmons (2; Yonder Alonso)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Indians 1B Yonder Alonso (strike two call; QOCN) in the top of the 8th inning of the Indians-Yankees game. With two out and one on (R1), Alonso took a 1-0 cutter from Yankees pitcher David Robertson for a called first strike and 1-1 cutter from Robertson for a called second strike before flying out on the ensuing pitch. Replays indicate the 1-0 pitch was located over the outer edge of home plate and at the hollow of the knee (px -.726, pz 1.522 [sz_bot 1.565 / MOE 1.482]) and the 1-1 pitch was located off the outer edge of home plate and at the hollow of the knee (px -1.022, pz 1.500), the call was incorrect.* At the time of the ejection, the game was tied, 5-5. The Yankees ultimately won the contest, 7-6.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s second ejection of 2018.
Tim Timmons now has 4 points in the UEFL Standings (6 Prev + 2 MLB - 4 Incorrect Call = 4).
Crew Chief Tim Timmons now has 0 points in Crew Division (0 Previous + 0 Incorrect Call = 0).
*UEFL Rule 6-2-b-1 (Kulpa Rule): |0| < STRIKE < |.748| < BORDERLINE < |.914| < BALL.
*The 1-1 pitch to Alonso was 1.296 horizontal inches from a correct call. The 1-0 pitch was properly officiated.

This is the 30th ejection of the 2018 MLB regular season.
This is the 15th player ejection of 2018. Prior to ejection, Alonso was 1-4 (SO) in the contest.
This is Cleveland's 1st ejection of 2018, T-1st in the AL Central (CLE, CWS, DET 1; KC, MIN 0).
This is Yonder Alonso's first ejection since July 15, 2016 (Mark Wegner; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Tim Timmons' 2nd ejection of 2018, 1st since April 8 (Torey Lovullo; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).

Wrap: Cleveland Indians vs. New York Yankees, 5/4/18 | Video as follows:

Sunday, April 8, 2018

MLB Ejection 010 - Tim Timmons (1; Torey Lovullo)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Diamondbacks Manager Torey Lovullo (strike one-two-three calls, preceded USC-NEC/fighting STL catcher Yadier Molina; QOCY) in the top of the 2nd inning of the Diamondbacks-Cardinals game. With none out and none on, Diamondbacks batter AJ Pollock took a 0-0 fastball from Cardinals pitcher Luke Weaver for a called first strike, 3-1 fastball for a called second strike, and 3-2 fastball for a called third strike. Replays indicate the 0-0 pitch was located over the outer edge of home plate and thigh high (px 0.859, pz 2.051), the 3-1 pitch was located over the outer half of home plate and waist high (px 0.530, pz 2.389), and the 3-2 pitch was located over the outer half of home plate and at the hollow of the knee (px 0.272, pz 1.448 [sz_bot 1.504 / MOE 1.421]), the call was correct.* At the time of the ejection, the game was tied, 0-0. The Diamondbacks ultimately won the contest, 4-1.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s first ejection of 2018.
Tim Timmons now has 4 points in the UEFL Standings (0 Prev + 2 MLB + 2 Correct Call = 4).
Crew Chief Mike Winters now has 0 points in Crew Division (-1 Previous + 1 Correct Call = 0).
*Reason for ejection is Balls/Strikes, as Lovullo was already ejected before engaging Yadier Molina.
*UEFL Rule 6-2-b-1 (Kulpa Rule): |0| < STRIKE < |.748| < BORDERLINE < |.914| < BALL.
*The 3-2 pitch was located 0.324 vertical inches from being deemed an incorrect call.

This is the 10th ejection of the 2018 MLB regular season.
This is the 5th Manager ejection of 2018.
This is Arizona's 2nd ejection of 2018, 1st in the NL West (ARI 2; COL, LAD, SD, SF 0).
This is Torey Lovullo's first ejection since August 20, 2017 (John Tumpane; QOC = U [Warnings]).
This is Tim Timmons' first ejection since July 10, 2016 (Yunel Escobar; QOC = N-C [Check Swing]).

Wrap: Arizona Diamondbacks vs. St. Louis Cardinals, 4/8/18 | Video as follows:

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Forgetful Infield Fly - Reversing Calls Across Levels

Umpires reversed an erroneous force out call during an infield fly rule play in Grapefruit League action, scoring a run that had seemingly been nullified just moments earlier. By now, we know what the infield fly rule is and how to communicate when a potential IFR situation occurs, but what happens if an umpire or entire crew forgets to call "infield fly" when it occurs? Is the batter still out or are runners forced to advance—and what happens if a fielder attempts to force out a baserunner or a time play occurs at home, as was the case in Florida?

Recap: To briefly review the infield fly rule's three criteria: 1) First and second (at least) occupied with less than two out; 2) batter hits a fair fly ball that is not a line drive nor a bunt, that; 3) can be caught by any infielder using ordinary effort. For more about the infield fly rule, including its definition, ordinary effort, and pre-play communication, see the following two articles:
Related Post: Infield Fly and a Double Play - Back to Basics for Phillies (4/11/16).
Related PostKnowing the Situation - Infield Flies and Time Plays (9/15/17).

Mechanics confusion reigned in Florida.
So now that we know what should happen during an infield fly play, it's time to explore what happens when things go awry, including rules differences amongst the NFHS, NCAA, and OBR codes.

Perhaps true to the Spring Training moniker, umpire Jeff Kellogg's crew encountered an infield fly situation over the weekend that took an odd turn when the plate umpire forewent an infield fly signal as a fly ball dropped untouched on the infield with the bases loaded.

The Play (Annotated with the infield fly criteria): With one out and the bases loaded, Twins batter Byron Buxton swung and hit a fair fly ball in front of home plate, where Red Sox catcher Blake Swihart, in what should have been a routine catch, bobbled and dropped the batted ball. Pitcher Rick Porcello picked up the loose ball, tagged home plate, and thew to second baseman Brock Holt, who tagged Twins baserunner R2 Bobby Wilson between second and third base.

Sidebar, in case you were wondering: the infield fly rule takes precedence over the intentional drop rule; this is due, in part, to the fact that an infield fly is declared before the ball reaches the fielder [i.e., before the fielder has a chance to intentionally drop it].
Related Post: Phillips' DP Attempt Reversed by Intentional Drop Rule (9/19/17).

The Call: Confounding the issue, while 2B Umpire Tim Timmons properly signaled the infield fly (batter out), plate umpire Kellogg signaled baserunner R3 out upon F1 Porcello's tag of home plate; no call was immediately made when F4 Holt tagged R2 Wilson (who appeared to have given up as a result of observing both B1 and R3 being declared out for outs #2 and #3), as Timmons' back was to the tag.

This produced a logically impossible double play: Once the batter (or any trailing baserunner) is declared out, the force on any preceding baserunner is removed; R3 should not have been declared out via force at home.

2B Umpire Tim Timmons calls Buxton out.
The End Result: After discussion amongst the three umpires, batter Buxton was declared out pursuant to the infield fly rule, R3 Aybar's out was reversed to a run scored, and R2 Wilson was declared out because of F4 Holt's tag. The problem, naturally, lies in the erroneous out call on the fake force/tag at home, upon which Aybar ceased to exist as a baserunner (and took away the potential for a time play, as would normally occur with a runner trotting home from third base with two outs, as was the case when Wilson was tagged for the final out of the inning, though U2 didn't call the out when it occurred because he wasn't facing the play [and because three outs had already transpired, however erroneous the third out was]). Did Kellogg's force-out mechanic cause Boston to give up on R3 Aybar? (Logically, it has to be yes, since R3 had already been "retired.")

Not as clear, however, is its effect on R1 Zack Granite (who advanced to second) and R2 Wilson (who abandoned ship after the phantom "third out" at home plate). By rule, Kellogg's force out call caused Aybar to disappear, meaning the umpires had to correct an error. The relevant rule under OBR to correct the mistake is 8.02(c), which states, in part:
If the umpires consult after a play and change a call that had been made, then they have the authority to take all steps that they may deem necessary, in their discretion, to eliminate the results and consequences of the earlier call that they are reversing, including placing runners where they think those runners would have been after the play, had the ultimate call been made as the initial call, disregarding interference or obstruction that may have occurred on the play; failures of runners to tag up based upon the initial call on the field; runners passing other runners or missing bases; etc., all in the discretion of the umpires.
Kellogg spots the error and convenes his crew.
To be crystal clear, the "call that they are reversing" in this situation was Kellogg's force out call of Aybar at home plate; no other call was reversed. Timmons' earlier infield fly call was not modified in any way.

If the crew believed that, had Kellogg made the correct call in real-time (which would have been a no-call on R3 at home), Aybar would have scored, then the solution to "eliminate the results and consequences of the earlier call that they are reversing" is to score the run, whether or not Aybar physically touched home plate prior to F4 Holt's tag of R2 Wilson (since, again, Aybar technically did not exist as R3 after the phantom force, and F4 Holt's tag of R2 Wilson was superfluous [and a fourth out in its own right]).

Gil's Call: There are probably three realistic options for this play, all of which involve declaring the batter out pursuant to the infield fly rule, as declared by Timmons in real-time.

The first option is what Kellogg's crew decided to do: B1 out, R3 scores, R2 out. The second is the same as the first, except that R3's run does not count. The third essentially "kills" the play at the moment of error: B1 out, R1 to 1st, R2 to 2nd, and R3 to 3rd (this approach is rather similar to an NCAA procedure for changing "no catch" to "catch" [see below]).

However, because of Rule 8.02(c)'s requirement to place runners "where [the umpires] think those runners would have been after the play, had the ultimate call been made as the initial call," options #1 or #2 are likely most reasonable. There stands a good chance that R1 Granite would have attempted to advance to second base even without Kellogg's call at home, meaning that R2 Wilson would have been hung out to dry regardless of the incorrect initial call. Which solution is "more correct?" That's for the umpires on the field to decide, likely taking into consideration Aybar's speed for a mental time play calculation.

> QOC Consideration: Pursuant to precedent established in Dale Scott's 2012 ejection of Padres Manager Bud Black for arguing an inadvertent "time" mechanic-turned triple play, QOC here is likely incorrect.
Related PostEjections: Dale Scott (1) (4/15/12).

Rules Difference: The aforementioned is the pro (OBR) rule, but what of NCAA college or NFHS high school?

NCAA: The college book doesn't directly address the case of a changed infield fly, but does include a section called "Appendix E: Getting the Call Right." Similarly, this portion of the rules book does not specifically address bungled infield fly plays (though it does specifically state what must happen when a call of "catch" is changed to "no catch" [dead ball, batter awarded first, baserunners awarded one base from time-of-pitch] and "no catch" to "catch" [dead ball, batter out, baserunners returned to bases occupied at time-of-pitch], both on balls hit into the outfield or any foul ball [or, if an infield-bound "no catch" call is changed to a "catch," when that decision would result in the third out or no runners are on base]).

In high school, teams must know the situation.
There exists a note within Appendix E which states, "The Crew Chief and crew should be conservative on their placement of base runners," and, additionally, "Some calls cannot be reversed without creating larger problems." Nonetheless, Part D of Appendix E states, "Both NCAA philosophy and umpire integrity – consistent with NCAA rules – dictate that calls are reversed in this situation [when the umpire's initial decision is clearly erroneous]." Judgment calls exempted from reversal include tag plays when the fielder clearly holds on to the ball (e.g., stolen base attempts), force plays (when the ball isn't dropped and the foot not pulled), and pitch location ball/strike calls. The Porcello/Buxton/Aybar play is not, however, a judgment call; it is a rules application issue that should be addressed.

NFHS: The high school case book states that players and teams are responsible for knowing when an infield fly situation exists, even when the umpire erroneously forgets to call "infield fly" or calls it at an inappropriate time ("both teams have the responsibility to know when conditions exist for an infield fly" 10.2.3 Situations F & G). High school explicitly requires a batter erroneously declared out to attempt to reach base safely in order to be awarded the base after the play. By that token, NFHS would likely score Aybar's run based on the crew chief's duty to "rectify any situation in which an umpire's decision that was reversed has placed either team at a disadvantage," since the teams were responsible for knowing the infield fly situation. In the end, perhaps this is a situation in which the umpires legitimately do not know whether Aybar beat the third out (due to, again, the erroneous force play for the premature third out at home plate), in which case, a healthy dose of game management will be most vital.

Video as follows:

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Media - Danley, Muchlinski (AZ) & Timmons (FL) Talk Shop

Spring Training 2018 has produced a nearly unprecedented level of umpire interviews, with Kerwin Danley a featured speaker at MLB's Dream Series, and local profiles of Mike Muchlinski in Arizona and Tim Timmons in Florida. Meanwhile, Ted Barrett sat down for an extended conversation about new rules and replay.

Kerwin Danley: In a recently-published video from the 2018 Dream Series, MLB umpire Kerwin Danley spoke alongside former pitcher LaTroy Hawkins to a group of high school athletes about officiating, and complaints about balls and strikes, which have increased dramatically since the adoption of expanded replay review
It's the pitching coaches first. Hitting coaches, you don't hear from them that much, unless...you're having a bad day, then you hear from them.
The data support Danley's observation: just two hitting coaches were ejected in 2017, compared to seven pitching coaches.

MLB Umpire Mike Muchlinski is in Arizona.
Mike Muchlinski: Cincinnati, Ohio's WCPO-TV shadowed Muchlinski during a day at Goodyear Ballpark, the Reds' and Indians' shared-use stadium in Arizona's Cactus League, discussing his path to the major leagues and how umpires prepare for the regular season, including enforcement new rules, rotation between the bases, and the rigors of spending months away from home and family. A brief glimpse of Muchlinski and Adam Hamari discussing what is and isn't a mound visit appears as well.
We prepare every day to get every call right. Realistically, that's not going to happen, so it's a good thing to be able to fix the big errors, especially when it comes to a decision that affects the outcome of a game.
MLB Umpire Tim Timmons is in Florida.
Tim Timmons: In Florida, local station WFTX joined Tim Timmons at Jet Blue Park to get the Grapefruit League perspective. Like Muchlinski, Timmons described his journey to the big leagues and recounted the story of his first interaction with Hank Aaron, who told a group of aspiring minor league umpires, "If you give to this game, it will repay you ten-fold."

Explained Timmons concerning the villainy of the umpire, "the jeers pay the bills." As Muchlinski stated in Arizona, the downside of professional umpiring is the time spent away from family.

MLB Umpire Ted Barrett is in Arizona.
Ted Barrett: Fresh off his in-game interview with Angels baseball, veteran crew chief Ted Barrett sat down with ESPN to discuss MLB's new mound visit limit, replay, technology, and fan perception.
Related PostSpring Feature - Ted Barrett Interviewed During Game (3/16/18).

Barrett foresees that MLB will tie up any loose ends concerning mound visits by Opening Day. For example, when a catcher took a foul ball off his mask in late February, the plate umpire charged the defensive team with a mound visit because the pitcher had walked to home plate to check on his battery mate. Although MLB still hasn't formally addressed that specific play, the League has issued clarification that a catcher visiting the mound to buy an injured umpire some time after a similar foul ball situation would not be deemed a mound visit.
Related PostSo it Begins - Mound Visit Charged on Injury Timeout (2/27/18).

Regarding replay, Barrett likened having a call of his overturned to that of a batter striking out: "Anytime you fail, that's tough. You have to get over it. And it's not just when the game is on the line: I would feel bad if I cost a guy a base hit."

Certain strike zone plots can be misleading.
In admitting he has never called a catcher for blocking the plate in real-time, a trend that holds true for every big league umpire—MLB has yet to experience an umpire calling a blocking-the-plate violation in real-time...such a play was only overturned from "no violation" to "violation" via replay, thus scoring a run, once out of 13 total reviews in 2017, and that was during the postseason, resulting in an ejection—Barrett explained that such a call is difficult to see in real time.
Related PostMLB Ejection P-2 - Mike Winters (2; Joe Maddon) (10/14/17).
If it's blatant, I'll call it. Otherwise, replay will do the overturning.
Improved technology has also led to electronic (albeit faulty) ball/strike calculations, which have most popularly spawned a series of statistical umpire rankings, although the tech used from one system to the next may not be consistent (nor accurate). Instead, Barrett relies on the innovation to help with reviewing technique, such as positioning or stance consideration: "It's a never-ending self-analysis."
Related PostAnalyzing Strike Zone Analysis - Not So Easy or Simple (10/27/16).

Finally, Barrett discussed fans, how he generally tunes them out, and how the World Umpires Association turned to Twitter (@MLBaseballUmps) to try and get the umpires' viewpoint out into a world that hasn't always allowed sports officials to speak up.

For instance, the WUA used the account to communicate the circumstances surrounding its white wristband protest of escalating verbal attacks and the Commissioner's deficient response to such unsportsmanlike acts during the 2017 season.
Related PostWUA-MLB Relations Deteriorate with New Umpire Protest (8/19/17).

The protest lasted all of one day before Commissioner Rob Manfred agreed to meet with the umpires. Barrett serves on the WUA Governing Board.
Related PostWUA Secures Commissioner Meeting, Suspends Protest (8/20/17).

Barrett wanted to make it known that despite popular grumblings to the contrary, umpires are held to standard:
That's the biggest thing I want to get across to people that say, "Big league umpires have no accountability." Every play and pitch we call is analyzed. We get reviewed on everything. It's not always public, just like internal things with players and teams aren't always public. We make every effort to be at our best. 
Videos (3x) and Source Links as follows:

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

Handling a Bench Clearing Incident - Battle of Texas

Benches cleared in Houston after a pitch thrown behind Rangers batter Mike Napoli, spurring HP Umpire and Crew Chief Gerry Davis into an abbreviated exercise of situation handling.

Benches clear and get physical in Houston.
With two out and none on in the top of the 6th inning of Monday's Rangers-Astros game, Napoli took a first-pitch 97.7-mph fastball from Astros starting pitcher Lance McCullers Jr. for ball one. Replays indicate the pitch was thrown significantly inside (behind Napoli's back) and approximately shoulder-high. Following the pitch, Napoli began walking toward the pitcher's mound and was intercepted at the edge of the dirt circle by HP Umpire Davis as pitcher McCullers walked about half the distance from the pitcher's plate to home plate before stopping.

Despite Davis' plea for the Rangers to remain in their dugout, no such peace transpired as both benches—and bullpens—cleared, and the two teams engaged in physical interaction with each other along the infield amongst Davis and his crew of Pat Hoberg (1B), Rob Drake (2B), and Tony Randazzo (3B).

No ejections resulted in the aftermath of the Houston altercation, though Davis ultimately issued warnings.

Tim Timmons intervening in a 2011 incident.
This bench-clearing incident in which umpires unsuccessfully attempted to prevent the teams from encroaching upon the playing field brings to mind Tim Timmons' 2011 ejection of former Cubs pitcher Carlos Zambrano for throwing at Chipper Jones and the situation handling demonstrated by Timmons and crew—yes, there are circumstances under which preventing brawls and physically hostile bench-clearing events can be accomplished through game management and situation handling techniques.

During the Zambrano-Jones play, Timmons forcefully ordered the Braves dugout to remain off the field, assisted by 1B Umpire and Crew Chief Jeff Kellogg, who was quick to pick up on Timmons' command, and 3B Umpire Mark Carlson, who contained the visiting dugout with the assistance of 2B Umpire Eric Cooper.

Cubs broadcaster Len Kasper, in describing Timmons' actions, stated:
We can debate whether or not [Zambrano] should have been tossed, but I think Tim Timmons handled this well because the Braves were coming out of the dugout, and we had a bench clearing situation that was about to start, and he stopped it. And that's the goal for an umpire.
Joe West handles ATL; Holbrook takes Harper.
As for the specifics of batter-pitcher animosity, Joe West in 2013 physically restrained Braves catcher Brian McCann as plunked Nationals batter Bryce Harper jawed with pitcher Julio Teheran while 1B Umpire Sam Holbrook ran to intercept Harper. 2B Umpire Adam Hamari concurrently ran interference between the Nationals' and Braves' respective dugouts and bullpens to prevent a physical altercation while 3B Umpire Rob Drake took Teheran.

Heads Up: Two Astros had been hit by pitches earlier in Monday's game; it was the first meeting of 2017 for the two Lone Star State ball clubs. Napoli's previous at-bat resulted in a home run.

Video via "Read More"

Sunday, July 10, 2016

MLB Ejection 106 - Tim Timmons (3; Yunel Escobar)

HP Umpire Tim Timmons ejected Angels 3B Yunel Escobar for arguing a check swing (ball two) call by 3B Umpire Jordan Baker in the bottom of the 7th inning of the Angels-Orioles game. With one out and one on, Orioles batter Chris Davis attempted to check his swing on a 1-1 fastball from Angels pitcher Cam Bedrosian for a called second ball, affirmed as "no swing" by 3B Umpire Baker (see UEFL Rule 6-2-c-b-AR/the appellate umpire is considered Calling). Play was reviewed and adjudicated by the UEFL Appeals Board, the call was incorrect. At the time of the ejection, the Orioles were leading, 3-1. The Orioles ultimately won the contest, 4-2.

This is Tim Timmons (95)'s third ejection of the 2016 MLB regular season.
Tim Timmons now has 3 points in the UEFL Standings (3 Prev + 2 MLB - 2 QOCN-Crewmate = 3).
Crew Chief Mike Everitt now has 9 points in Crew Division (9 Previous + 0 Incorrect Call = 9).

This is the 106th ejection report of the 2016 regular season.
This is the 51st player ejection of 2016. Prior to ejection, Escobar was 0-3 (SO) in the contest.
This is Anaheim's 4th ejection of 2016, T-1st in the AL West (HOU, LAA, TEX 4; OAK, SEA 1).
This is Yunel Escobar's 3rd ejection of 2016, 1st since May 28 (Vic Carapazza; QOC = Y [Balls/Strikes]).
This is Tim Timmons' first ejection since July 5, 2016 (Miguel Cabrera; QOC = N-C [Foul/HBP]).

Wrap: Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. Baltimore Orioles, 7/10/16 | Video available via "Read more"