MYNORTHWEST NEWS

The most hated man on the Little League field: The umpire

Feb 28, 2013, 5:25 AM | Updated: 8:47 am

The umpire is quite possibly the toughest job in Little League. Harder than manager. Harder than te...

The umpire is quite possibly the toughest job in Little League. Harder than manager. Harder than team mom. (AP Photo/File)

(AP Photo/File)

A lot of you are about to head out to your kids’ first Little League games of the season. As you sit in the stands hoping your son or daughter gets a hit or makes a great catch and dreams of college scholarships dance in your heads, you probably never think twice about the man in blue. The game manager, crowd controller and rule enforcer. The guy no one notices until he screws up.

The umpire.

It’s quite possibly the toughest job in Little League. Harder than manager. Harder than team mom.

Most umpires get their start by being pulled out of the stands and being volunteered by their coaches because there wouldn’t be a game without them. That’s kind of how Tony MacKay first ended-up behind the plate. He put on the mask once he stopped coaching his daughter. Now, he’s the umpire in chief for Mill Creek Little League.

Making the calls isn’t the toughest part. Being in the right spot isn’t the toughest spot. It’s learning to deal with the moms and the dads and the coaches that seem to forget you’re a volunteer.

“I don’t think about the abuse people send my way,” said MacKay. “I figure it’s just what they think is part of being a fan or part of being a manager. Many fans like to dispute every call you have.”

MacKay remembers one game in particular where a mom was riding him on every pitch.

“I went back through the screen and asked her if the seat beside her was empty, available,” he said. “She looked at me a little bit confused, and she said ‘Yes it is.’ Of course, my response at that point was, ‘Good. I’ll be over there to sit beside you because it sounds like you have a great view of the strike zone from there.'”

Even though MacKay knows he probably shouldn’t have confronted her, the mom shut up.

One of my big concerns as a first time majors coach is how to avoid being ejected for getting a little too emotional during games. MacKay made it pretty clear. Swearing will get me tossed. So will any phrase that starts with the word “you” and ends with an insult.

“You are the worst ever,” said MacKay. “You are blind. You are an idiot. Those are all quick ways to get ejected.”

Now, he will give most managers a final chance. He usually asks managers if they really want to get ejected, though one time it backfired.

“The coach said ‘Yes it’s my wife’s birthday, and I’d like to get home,'” he said. MacKay said he wasn’t ready for that answer, but “I let him go,” he joked.

Until I took a four hour umpire’s clinic this week, I had no idea what they did, besides call balls and strikes and interpret more convoluted rules than our current tax code. They move a lot. They have to make sure they’re in the right spot and avoid the players. They are doing their best. They want to be right. They’re not out to screw us or our teams.

“A good player is unsuccessful seven times out of ten,” MacKay said. “A good coach will be happy if he calls a steal that is successful 60 percent of the time. With an umpire, if we make two errors in our 100 to 150 judgement decisions within a game, that’s a bad game.”

But before you give these volunteers too much sympathy they do have the best seat in the house. When they do blow a call, the entire crowd isn’t yelling at them. Half of the crowd is happy.

MyNorthwest News

General view of some 500 cars parking inside the new Hybrid and PHEV Vehicles Stellantis Group eDCT...

Bill Kaczaraba

Electric vehicle rebates coming this summer for Washingtonians

Washington motorists will get an opportunity to benefit from new state rebates for electric vehicles (EVs) starting this summer.

11 minutes ago

Photo: Sextortion is a growing trend but Meta is taking steps to stop it....

Micki Gamez

Sextortion is trapping our teens but one major company is working to stop it

Sextortion is a recent online phenomenon that is considered image-based sexual abuse and Psychology Today calls it a worldwide crisis.

32 minutes ago

Photo: King County deputies are looking for this jeep....

James Lynch

King County deputies searching for suspected hit-and-run jeep

King County deputies are looking for a jeep believed to be connected to a hit-and-run that happened in White Center.

1 hour ago

Michelle Gutierrez, organizer with Service Employees International Union joined with the Denver Pos...

Sam Campbell, KIRO Newsradio and Bill Kaczaraba, MyNorthwest

More freedom for Washington workers as noncompete contracts are challenged

The Federal Trade Commission has swung its regulatory hammer, striking down nearly all non-compete agreements.

4 hours ago

boeing q1 loss...

Frank Sumrall

Boeing posts $355 million loss in Q1 after series of company crises

"We are in a tough moment," Boeing CEO David Calhoun said as the company announced a $355 million loss in 2024's Q1.

8 hours ago

Photo: Lund Hill solar farm in Klickitat County, Washington, the state’s largest photovoltaic pla...

Julia Dallas

Washington receives over $150M to implement solar, lower energy costs

On Monday, The EPA announced Washington has been selected to get $156M to develop long-lasting solar programs for low-income communities.

21 hours ago

The most hated man on the Little League field: The umpire