You've probably never heard me say this before, and I really don't like saying it at all, so I'm only going to say it once: Bud Selig was right.
You know what I'm talking about. It's the same thing everybody's talking about today.
Let's get a couple of things out front right away.
First, Joyce's call was wrong. No question about it. He said it, the runner said it, everybody knows it.
Second, it was a lot closer than anyone is letting on. Look at all the replays, from multiple angles, and it's clear that it was really pretty close, and the ball appears to be bouncing around in Galarraga's glove for a period, and he doesn't have control of the ball until he stops bobbling it. From Joyce's angle, in real time, I don't doubt that he looked safe.
Third, if you watch enough baseball, what you see is that the umpires are right almost all the time. It's small consolation on that one occasion when they blow a big one, but they almost always get the right answer at a very hard job under a lot of pressure.
So what should have happened? Is there some principled way that Selig could have done what almost the whole world wanted? I don't think so.
A philosophy professor I had once defined a game as an activity in which an arbitrarily selected goal is pursued by arbitrarily restricted means.
In other words, in a very real sense, the game is the rules.
From the Official Rules:
9.02 (a) Any umpire’s decision which involves judgment, such as, but not limited to, whether a batted ball is fair or foul, whether a pitch is a strike or a ball, or whether a runner is safe or out, is final.
Final. That's what the rule says, and that's what it means.
Even the most casual observer is familiar with the concept of playing a game under protest, but that doesn't offer an out here, because a somewhat less casual observer knows that a protest is not available for judgment calls:
Even if it is held that the protested decision violated the rules, no replay of the game will be ordered unless in the opinion of the League President the violation adversely affected the protesting team’s chances of winning the game.
But wait, some will say, what about the Pine Tar Incident? That was actually not at all a counterexample. The Pine Tar Incident was a routine protest of a call, in which the decision of the umpire under protest was not a judgment call (e.g. how high up the barrel of George Brett's bat the pine tar went) but what the consequence of that determination should have been.
So it's clear that a protest would have been unavailable to change the result. Is there any other basis to reverse Joyce's decision? Many commentators have referred to the “best interests clause” of baseball's Constitution as a panacea, but I think that this is misguided.
First off, it's very hard to find out what the best interests clause actually says. People who know it exists understand that it gives the commissioner broad power, but they don't really know what it says. I went to some effort to find it, and here's what it says:
Art. II, Sec. 2. The functions of the Commissioner shall include:
(b) To investigate, either upon complaint or upon the Commisioner's own initiative, any act, transaction or practice charged, alleged, or suspected to be not in the best interests of the national game of Baseball, with authrotiy to summon person and to order the production of documents, and, in case of refusal to appear or produce, to impose such penalties as are hereinafter provded.
(c) To determine, after investigation, what preventive, remedical or punitive action is appropriate in the premises, and to take such action either against Major League Clubs or individuals, as the case may be.
I haven't been able to find any instances where the commissioner has interfered with the outcome of a game or play call by an umpire using this provision, and it doesn't appear to me that such a step is contemplated by the Clause. It's ordinarily used to stop owners from doing things, like when they didn't let Charlie O. Finley from his wholesale giveaway of the Athletics. It has arguably been getting broader under Bud Lite, but I still don't see how it applies to forcing umpires to change their decisions, even an umpire who desperately wishes he could.
Any other ideas? I saw a suggestion earlier today that “In 1991, a panel headed by then-commissioner Fay Vincent took a look at the record book and decided to throw out 50 no-hitters for various reasons.”
This is true. The records have been amended for various reasons at various times. For instance, I think (it may have been part of Vincent's review) they went through all the box scores and awarded Hack Wilson two additional RBI, bringing his season record to 192.
Still, this isn't the same thing. In 1991 the Committee on Statistical Accuracy decertified a number of no-hitters based on a rule change that the pitcher must pitch at least nine complete innings to be credited with a no-hitter. That change was based on the application of a new rule to the play on the field and the decisions made by the umpires on the field.
Like it or not, the game is governed by what happens on the field. From the perspective of a lifelong fan, I think it's very important that the games be conducted according to the rules. That's why Selig was way off base when he called the All-Star game a tie a few years back, and why he was right today. Joyce could have changed the call or asked one of the other umpires to tell him what he saw, but the call was his and I think that should be the end of it.
One other thing: people have been suggesting that in a situation like this every umpire would, and should, give the pitcher the “benefit of the doubt”, by which I assume they mean they should have called the runner out even if they had some doubt, or just because it was a close play and it meant giving him a perfect game. I think this is completely wrong. Obviously he would, and should, have had a perfect game. On the other hand, the umpire's job, and obligation, is to call the game, and every play in the game, honestly. Once you say they should start shading their judgment because of how they want things to turn out you're on very shaky ground. It's exactly what the Supreme Court did in Bush v. Gore, and we saw how ugly that turned out.
The decision today, and the stoic acceptance of the decision both last night and this morning by Armando Galarraga, is a statement in favor of the Rule of Law, and I praise everyone involved in today's decision.
Even Bud Lite.
Okay, first of all, let’s dispense with the excuse-making. Galarraga’s sno-cone catch has nothing to do with it. Joyce could have used that as an easy way out, but he didn’t, not at all: he said he thought the runner beat the throw. And the play was close, but not that close; there are closer calls every day, and umpires are paid to get them right. By his own admission, Joyce “kicked the sh*t out of it.”
Second, I could say many things about your learned disquisition, but I’ll keep it to one simple thing. Sometimes, there’s a difference between “the rules” and justice. And when “the rules” create an injustice, you can do one of three things: cite “the rules” like a Pharisee, set “the rules” aside in favor of a greater good, or admit that “the rules” failed and change them.
If I were Bud Selig… well, first, I’d get me to a Men’s Wearhouse and upgrade my wardrobe. But if I were Bud, I’d seriously consider the second course, and certainly pursue the third. There’s no damned reason why MLB shouldn’t have instant replay on a broader basis (Selig has been the bottleneck on this). There are a couple of easy ways to do it without adding to the length of games: a fifth ump in the press box who can check replay while the manager is out arguing a call, or an NFL-style “manager’s challenge” system that would allow each team to ask for one or two replays per game. If not for Ol’ Rumplesuit, MLB would already have such a system in place and Galarraga would have a perfect game.
And, after giving it a lot of thought, I’d probably overturn Joyce’s call and rule it a perfect game. I don’t care about precedent; this is an entirely unprecedented event in baseball history, and a Commissioner’s decision is not a Supreme Court ruling. I’d just say, “Look, this is clearly a case where “the rules” perpetrate an injustice, and for the good of the game, I’m overturning the call on the field. Perfect game.”
The sky would not fall, the walls would not crumble. Armando Galarraga, a pitcher of modest talents who will probably never have a game like that again, would have the place in baseball history that he earned. And Jim Joyce would not have to carry that blown call around his neck for the rest of his life; the stain on his otherwise admirable career would be removed.
i thought the way it came out was great.
galarraga will be long remembered for his graciousness, joyce for his honesty, and the whole episode as a reminder that there are more important things than perfection.
The rule you cited, Jack, about appointing umpires appears to apply to “championship game(s)”:
Perhaps every game is considered a “championship game,” in that it counts in the teams’ records by which eligibility for playoff series is determined.
NanuqFC
Play ball! ~ Umpires