Fr. 39.50

The Umpire Was Blind! - Controversial Calls by MLB's Men in Blue

English · Paperback / Softback

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In the words of former American League umpire Nestor Chylak, umpires are expected to "be perfect on the first day of the season and then get better every day." Forced to deal with sullen managers and explosive players, they often take the blame for the failures of both. But let's face it--umpires are only human.
For well over a century, the fortunes of Major League teams--and the fabric of baseball history itself--have been dramatically affected by the flawed decisions of officials. While the use of video replay in recent decades has reduced the number of bitter disputes, many situations remain exempt from review and are subject to swirling controversy. In the heat of the moment mistakes are often made, sometimes with monumental consequences. This book details some of these more controversial calls and the men who made them.

List of contents










Table of Contents

Preface

Introduction. The Devil We Know: A Very Brief History of Umpiring

Part One. The Umpire Giveth, the Umpire Taketh Away:

deleteStreaks and Records Helped or Hindered by Umpires

¿¿Johnny Vander Meer's Consecutive ­No-Hitters

¿¿Joe DiMaggio's 56-Game Hitting Streak

¿¿Don Larsen's Perfect World Series Game

¿¿Bob Shaw's ­Balk-a-Thon

¿¿Don Drysdale's Consecutive Scoreless Innings Streak

¿¿Orel Hershiser's Consecutive Scoreless Innings Streak

¿¿The 1998 Home Run Chase (Featuring Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa)

¿¿Kerry Wood's 20-Strikeout Performance

¿¿Armando Galarraga's ­Near-Perfect Game

¿¿Max Scherzer's ­Near-Perfect Game

Part Two. The Road to October: Critical Calls During

deletethe Regular Season

¿¿Bob Ferguson's Campaign Against Gambling

¿¿Tim Hurst and the Beer Glass Incident

¿¿Soggy Games in Pittsburgh: Round 1

¿¿Soggy Games in Pittsburgh: Round 2

¿¿Fred Merkle's Infamous Blunder

¿¿Stuffy McInnis's Gift Homer

¿¿Germany Schaefer Steals First Base

¿¿Bill Brennan Imposes His Iron Will

¿¿The Indecision of Charles Johnston

¿¿Red Jones's Fourteen Ejections

¿¿Two Balls in Play at Wrigley Field

¿¿Don Money's Nullified Grand Slam

¿¿The Pine Tar Game

¿¿Wild Card Tiebreaker Game

¿¿Bill Hohn's Fist Bump

¿¿19-Inning Marathon Ended by Jerry Meals's Blown Call

Part Three. The Victors and the Spoils: Playoff Controversies

¿¿The Jeffrey Maier Game

¿¿Livan Hernandez's 15-Strikeout Performance

¿¿The 1998 ALCS Disaster

¿¿1999 ALCS: The Phantom Tag and Other Issues

¿¿Pierzynski and the Uncaught Third Strike

¿¿Midges Invade Jacob's Field

¿¿2009 Playoffs: The Fall Guys

¿¿2010 Playoffs: Bad Calls in Multiple Rounds

¿¿2012 NL Wild Card Game: Improperly Invoked Infield Fly Rule

¿¿2015 ALCS Game 6: A Wet, Wild Finish in Kansas City

¿¿2016 NLCS Game 4: Angel Hernandez's Blown Call at Home Plate

¿¿2017 NLDS Game 5: Nationals Lose on Account of Jerry Layne's Mistakes

Part Four: Legends of the Fall: Infamous World Series

deleteDebates

¿¿1885 World's Championship Series: Umpire David Sullivan's Hot Mess

¿¿1911 World Series Game 5: The Run That Shouldn't Have

delete deleteCounted

¿¿1925 World Series Game 3: Sam Rice's Mystery Catch

¿¿1935 World Series Game 3: Moriarty Defies Landis with 3 Ejections

¿¿1948 World Series Game 1: Bill Stewart's Blown Pickoff Call on Phil Masi

¿¿1955 World Series Game 1: Jackie Robinson Steals Home

¿¿1969 World Series Game 5: The Old Shoe Polish Trick

¿¿1970 World Series Game 1: Ken Burkhart's Miraculous

delete delete­Behind-the-Back Call

¿¿1975 World Series Game 3: Armbrister Interferes with Fisk

¿¿1978 World Series Game 4: Reggie Jackson Interferes with Infield Throw

¿¿1985 World Series Game 6: Don Denkinger's Blown Call at First Base

¿¿1998 World Series Game 1: Rich Garcia Gives Tino Martinez an Extra Pitch to Work With

¿¿2006 World Series Game 2: Kenny Rogers and the "Smudgegate" Affair

¿¿2011 World Series Games 3 and 7: Ron Kulpa and Jerry Layne Make a Mess of Things

¿¿2013 World Series Game 3: Cardinals Score ­Game-Winner

on Obstruction Call at Third Base

¿¿2017 World Series Game 5: Bill Miller's Oddly Shaped Strike Zone

Notes

Bibliography

Index


About the author

Jonathan Weeks has authored several sports biographies and two novels. He lives in Malone, New York.

Summary

In the words of former American League umpire Nestor Chylak, umpires are expected to “be perfect on the first day of the season and then get better every day.” Forced to deal with sullen managers and explosive players, they often take the blame for the failures of both. But let's face it - umpires are only human.

Product details

Authors Jonathan Weeks, Weeks Jonathan
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation from age 18
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.10.2020
 
EAN 9781476680323
ISBN 978-1-4766-8032-3
No. of pages 214
Dimensions 152 mm x 229 mm x 11 mm
Weight 277 g
Illustrations Raster,schwarz-weiss
Subjects Guides > Sport > Ball sport

Baseball, SPORTS & RECREATION / Baseball / History

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