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It's safe to say these umpires should be out of a job

ANAHEIM, Calif. -- At the top of the food chain, a major league umpire makes upward of $300,000 to work six months a year. Don't choke on that, because it gets worse.

Tim McClelland is at the top of the food chain.

Choke on that.

Tim McClelland is the guy who umpired third base Tuesday night in the American League Championship Series. He mistakenly determined that the Yankees' Nick Swisher had left third base too soon when scoring on Johnny Damon's fly ball in the fourth -- then couldn't go one whole inning before making a worse call in the fifth. That's when he called New York's Robinson Cano safe at third after Angels catcher Mike Napoli tagged him while Cano stood about a foot from the bag -- and no more than five feet from McClelland.

Tim McClelland is the clown who made a joke of Game 4.

You and me? We're the clowns who didn't.

We're clowns because we didn't have the foresight to start umpiring at age 15 like McClelland, working Little League and high school games before moving to professional baseball and then moving up the ladder toward all those big league fields of dreams. We're not making $300,000 to work six months a year. We're not joking with ballplayers between innings. We're not on television.

On the bright side, we're not screwing up the 2009 playoffs.

Tim McClelland is screwing it up -- and there are a whole lot of Tim McClellands out there. That's what is so scary about the rash of ugly umpiring that has scarred the 2009 postseason: These guys might actually be the best umpires that baseball has to offer. And how awful an idea is that? If McClelland and some of his mates worked the drive-thru at McDonald's, they'd hand you the wrong sandwich and forget your fries.

For fans of the game, the only relief to be felt at this moment is that neither McClelland nor his blooper brother from Tuesday night, second-base umpire Dale Scott, screwed up the totality of the game as awfully as they screwed up a handful of individual calls. The Yankees deserved to win Game 4, albeit by a slightly bigger margin than the 10-1 final that put them one victory from the World Series.

But that's where the relief ends, because the reality is this: There is no reason, none at all, to think the umpiring in the World Series will be any better than the umpiring in the first two rounds of the postseason.

I'm not talking about the missed bang-bang plays, either. Nobody reasonable would expect umpires to get those instantaneous calls correct every time, though we could reasonably ask baseball to expand its instant replay to correct those mistakes. Mistakes like the pitch that seemed to hit Detroit's Brandon Inge with the bases loaded in the 12th inning of the Tigers' loss to Minnesota in their one-game playoff. Or like the play when Colorado first baseman Todd Helton was mistakenly ruled off the bag on a Chase Utley groundout when replays showed Helton was in fact touching the base. Or even the play Tuesday night when the Angels picked off Swisher from second base by a few inches, and Scott missed it. The game moves fast, and mistakes happen. Instant replay would help, but those were understandable mistakes.

How in the world does Tim McClelland NOT see Robinson Cano get tagged out here? (Getty Images)  
How in the world does Tim McClelland NOT see Robinson Cano get tagged out here? (Getty Images)  
But some of these other mistakes ... they defy comprehension.

There was the Joe Mauer fly ball that was ruled foul by umpire Phil Cuzzi, even as he was in perfect position to get it right -- standing about 20 feet away and staring directly at the ball when it hit a foot inside fair territory. That denied Mauer a double in the 11th inning in the Division Series against the Yankees, the Twins didn't score that inning, and minutes later they lost when the Yankees did.

And there were the two blown calls by McClelland in Game 4, each galling for its own reason. On the appeal that cost Swisher a run in the fourth, McClelland seemed to be offering the Angels a makeup call for Scott's mistake moments earlier, when Swisher was picked off second but called safe. The idea of a makeup call, an intentional umpiring mistake, is egregious enough -- but McClelland wasn't even looking at Swisher on the play in question. Replays showed him staring into the outfield as Swisher left third base.

In the fifth, McClelland stood feet away as the Yankees screwed up on the base paths and ended up with two players -- Jorge Posada and Cano -- at third base at the same time. Unsure what to do, both Yankees stepped off the bag. Napoli tagged them both, but McClelland called only Posada out.

McClelland ruled Cano safe, and afterward when he gave a brief statement to the media, he said he thought Cano had been standing on the base. I was roughly 300 feet away -- 30 rows up, in the press box behind home plate -- and I could see Cano standing well off the base. McClelland was five feet away, and he couldn't? That's frightening.

But McClelland has a history of being historically bad. He butchered the rulebook in the infamous Pine Tar Game of 1983, calling George Brett out after Brett had homered with a bat with an excessive amount of pine tar. Then-AL president Lee MacPhail cited several reasons why McClelland was in error -- the bat could be removed from the game, MacPhail had said, but Brett couldn't be called out; and the pine tar didn't violate the "spirit of the rules" because it wasn't altered for advantageous reasons -- and overruled him.

That was 1983, and if you're looking to make excuses, here's one: McClelland was a rookie back then. But two years ago, he was not. That was the Matt Holliday game. Remember? Holliday was with the Rockies in 2007 when he scored the winning run in a one-game playoff with the Padres. Problem was, Holliday was blocked from the plate and didn't touch it. No matter. The umpire said he had. Game over. Rockies advance. Padres go home.

The umpire behind home plate? Tim McClelland.

Here in 2009, the Angels-Yankees series is his eighth NLCS or ALCS. He also has worked four World Series and three All-Star Games. The frequency of those elite assignments is an indicator that Tim McClelland is one of the best umpires in baseball.

Anyone know the Heimlich? I'm choking on that last paragraph.

 
 

Talk Back
Reputation:94
Level:All-Star
Since:Apr 21, 2008

October 21, 2009 6:56 pm
Why is the umpire allowed to make the wrong one?  As we all know from watching television replays, the correct call, especially in a game like baseball that doesn't have bodies flying around at the rate of a sport like football, can be made before the first pitch to the next batter.  It should take no longer than 45 seconds to make 90% of calls that could be reviewed.  Within 15 sec ...(more)
Reputation:89
Level:All-Star
Since:Nov 18, 2007

October 21, 2009 7:54 pm
I never understood why umpires in baseball can't just get together and discuss a close call.  I'm not talking about a bang bang play, but when it is so obvious that one umpire got it wrong, why don't the other umpires get together and get the call right.  One of the six umpires should of been able to see the double play at third.  I was watching something on MLB network, and Bob Cos ...(more)
Reputation:81
Level:All-Star
Since:Dec 9, 2007

October 21, 2009 1:22 pm
I can understand that an umpire can incorrectly call a bang-bang play that instant replay might shed light on.  I don't want instant replay there.  I can take the human component of the umpire siding with the snappy quick tag that looks so cool.  If that were converted to an instant replay call, the tag would end up being a tackle since you only care about having some footage that s ...(more)
Reputation:88
Level:All-Star
Since:Apr 9, 2009

October 21, 2009 7:45 pm

The umpiring for the MLB Playoffs this year have reached an untolerable point.  When Cuzzi missed the call in the Yankees vs. Twins series it was just one major mistake by the officiating crew and was easily overlooked although blatantly wrong.  As the mistakes pile up t ...(more)

Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 24, 2006

October 21, 2009 2:14 pm
From the end of the above article.........
"Here in 2009, the Angels-Yankees series is his eighth NLCS or ALCS. He also has worked four World Series and three All-Star Games. The frequency of those elite assignments is an indicator that Tim McClelland is one of the best umpires in baseball. "

As fa
...(more)
Reputation:81
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 8, 2009

October 22, 2009 2:35 am
How about the douche bag calling balls and strikes for game four?????  I know what the strike zone is and obviously none of these guys call it like it's supposed to be called, but that guy Tuesday night was beyond horrible.  The first inning homer by Howard was a gift from this idiot.  I'm not going to say the dogs lost the game because of ball/strike calls but that first inning seq ...(more)
Reputation:87
Level:All-Star
Since:Jan 22, 2007

October 21, 2009 11:26 am
Yes - the calls were missed and yes Mcllellan is rated too highly by his peers. He is a ham and egger that does solid work over the 130 regular season games he does. He has the basic equivalent of a Golfers yips in the post season.

No - you could not have been an MLB umpire - to even speculate that the cream of the crop is not working at that level is atypical of the quality of sports
...(more)
Reputation:93
Level:All-Star
Since:Jul 14, 2007

October 21, 2009 5:39 pm
This has to be the worse post season officiating of all time. It's time to clean up this mess and use instants replay. So many blown call that should be over turned. Selig and the owners need to make drastic changes and use instant replay to over turn these out rageous calls.  I could careless who wins, but, for Petes sake get the calls right. Allow the managers to challeng the calls ...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 16, 2007

October 21, 2009 10:32 pm
The reason there is not more replay in MLB already is because think about what would happen if we had it.

Conceeded - Replay could be useful for safe/out calls when the bases are empty and on hit by pitch calls.

Beyond that, for any scenerio, I can give you a way that replay could cause more problems then it helps.

Example 1 - The Mauer Foul Ball Play. Cuzzi
...(more)
Reputation:98
Level:Superstar
Since:Oct 16, 2007

October 21, 2009 10:09 pm
The last time SI surveyed the players in 2006, Tim McClelland was rated the best umpire in MLB.
Not only was he the highest rated, but 29% of the players surveyed said he was the best.
There are like 70 umpires, and he got 29% of the votes (The next best was 10%). So while he kicked the crap out of 2 calls last night, to say he should be fired is like saying if Manning throws 4 picks i
...(more)
Reputation:96
Level:Superstar
Since:Aug 30, 2006

October 21, 2009 7:38 pm

"The Yankees have two men on base!"

"Yeah? Which base?"

McClelland clearly stunk up the joint last night.

But he got the Holliday call in 2007 right.

Holliday's hand came under the shinguard of the catcher, gashing it open and bloody on the metal buckle of the guard, as he t ...(more)

Reputation:93
Level:All-Star
Since:Nov 18, 2006

October 21, 2009 12:36 pm
That was the single worst baserunning in the history of the play offs by old Jorge in that inning. He is on second base and doesn't score on a ball hit off of the wall? Then he is standing of third and bolts for home on a weak grounder to the pitcher? Then when he is dead at the plate instead of just taking the out like he should have he goes back to third where another runner was already there? A ...(more)
Reputation:93
Level:All-Star
Since:Feb 4, 2008

October 21, 2009 11:59 am
I've said it before, I'll say it again, if it wasn't for officiating, all sports games would be fair. I know there is something to be said for human error, but these guys are paid to be error free. They should have robot like precision when making a call. But they don't. Because this is not a full time job for most. A lot of these guys have other careers. Think of it this way, you have a full time ...(more)
Reputation:89
Level:All-Star
Since:Aug 28, 2006

October 21, 2009 8:53 am
First of all, let me just say I am a Yankee fan. Just a few thoughts:

1) It seems that the ump missed the call on Cano because he could not see the base and foot of Cano. One of the angles in the TV replay showed this, and the picture somewhat shows this. There is no other explanation, he was five feet away.

2) Was the call on Swisher a make up call? It sure seemed like i
...(more)
Reputation:93
Level:All-Star
Since:Apr 30, 2008

October 21, 2009 12:33 pm
Someone should make a highlight reel of the "blown" calls following the Yankees this post-season. There was that hit by Mauer late in the game in the second-to-last Twins/Yanks game where the ump in left field was standing 10' away from where the ball landed (which was 3' i ...(more)
 
 
 
 
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