Umpires … Yeah, they're human.
Lord knows I had my share of disputes, and I'll be first in line to say
there are umpires in the big leagues who have no business being there. I
do believe they should be held to a standard, a major league standard
in all aspects of everything they do.
Having said that, I watched in horror Wednesday night as Armando
Galarraga lost a perfect game because of a blown call by umpire Jim
Joyce. My heart broke for two reasons. First off, the kid did it. He
threw a perfect game that was ruined by a bad call.
The second reason was Jim Joyce does not -- and will not -- deserve 99
percent of the stupid things people will say about him in the coming
days. Jim Joyce is, and always has been, an exceptional umpire and a
fantastic guy. I had my run-ins with him; not often, but we did.
"I don't blame them a bit or anything that was said," Joyce said. "I
would've said it myself if I had been Galarraga. I would've been the
first person in my face, and he never said a word to me."
Joyce is a rare bird for this reason. He'll be the first to admit, as he
did Wednesday, when he makes a mistake. He's a damn good umpire,
incredibly consistent, which wins him votes with hitters and pitchers,
but most of all accountable. That's the one thing so many young umpires
have failed, and continue to fail to realize. We gripe a lot, too much
sometimes, as players. Hitters gripe about strikes, pitchers gripe about
balls.
Too many umpires fail to realize the quickest way to shut a player up is
to admit when you are wrong. What can I do when an umpire says "Yep,
missed it"?
The answer? Nothing. The great ones, Steve Palermo, Ed Rapuano, Jim
Joyce, to name a few, do that, and always have. Frank Pulli didn't admit
it much, but often enough that you never got too mad.
Calling it the biggest call of his career, Joyce said, "I just cost that
kid a perfect game. I thought he beat the throw. I was convinced he
beat the throw, until I saw the replay."
Umpires have been in the news far too much lately. The incident with
Bill Hohn, who tossed Roy
Oswalt over the weekend, was a shining example of what's wrong with
umpires. Too many are trying to be the game, instead of umpire the game.
Angel Hernandez did it on Tuesday night in the ninth inning in Toronto.
He did make the right call, but there is a right way and wrong way to
handle it. Angel was always good to me, and I respected him, but I
always thought his confrontational attitude got him more detractors than
he deserved as well as pushed him into more arguments.
Joe West? Same thing. Despite what some say, the guy is a good umpire.
Smaller strike zone than I would have liked, but Joe was always
consistent -- strike one was strike three. His attitude and demeanor get
him into more arguments than his calls, I think.
So yeah, Jim Joyce made a call Wednesday he'll never forget, for all the
wrong reasons, he changed history I guess. But I would ask you, if you
know baseball, to trust me when I tell you NO ONE feels worse than he
does right now, not even Armando Galarraga, I give you my word on that.
Curt Schilling is an analyst for "Baseball Tonight."