It’s a Really Weird Time to Be an Umpire
Umpires are likely to make headlines for one in all two causes — as a result of they’ve blown a name or blown a fuse — and sadly for Hernandez, over the course of his 30 years within the main leagues, he has acquired a fame for doing each. The latter took years to accumulate, aided by a collection of high-profile tempests of all varieties — skirmishes, ejections, missed calls — culminating in a single nightmare sport throughout the 2018 playoffs, when he had three calls overturned at first base. He was additionally on the middle of one in all M.L.B.’s earliest replay-review controversies, in 2013, which is possibly why it nonetheless lingers — he dedicated the unique sin.
During an in any other case forgettable early-season sport on May 8 that yr, the Oakland A’s have been down 4-3 within the high of the ninth to Cleveland when the A’s hit what seemed to be a game-tying house run. The ball ricocheted off the railing simply above the left-center fence, however the umps dominated that it had struck the highest of the wall, as an alternative making it a ground-rule double. Hernandez was the interim crew chief that day, so it was his job to go away the sphere, retreat to a tiny closet within the bowels of the stadium and research a grainy replay. Hernandez wanted “clear and convincing evidence” to overturn the ruling on the sphere, which was unimaginable on the replay closet’s 17-inch Panasonic monitor, so he didn’t overturn it. Upholding the unsuitable name was the fitting name, however he nonetheless was slaughtered for it. From then on, Hernandez was thought-about a kind of embittered, antiquated umps who seethed at having to confess he was unsuitable, even after we all may see it with our personal eyes, because of our vastly superior know-how at house.
Long earlier than this episode, although, Hernandez had turn into recognized across the league for seeming a bit too keen to combine it up with gamers and managers, for making nitpicky calls, for drawing consideration to himself, a critique that retains popping up in media accounts from the period and even in his efficiency evaluations from his bosses at M.L.B. He and West have been kindred spirits, old-school hard-liners, and the older-school hard-liners who had tutored them have been blunt concerning the guidelines of engagement with gamers: “You don’t trust any of ’em,” says Scott, who revealed a memoir final yr known as “The Umpire Is Out,” chronicling his profession by way of this period as a largely closeted homosexual umpire within the massive leagues. “They’re all out to get you.” This appeared to return naturally to Hernandez. “Some of the Latin umpires and the Latin players would joke around with him,” West informed me. “He didn’t do any of that, and so right away, that was a strike against him, as far as the players are concerned.” It was a strike in his favor, so far as Joe West was involved. “There is no gray matter in Angel Hernandez. It’s either black or it’s white — period,” he informed me. He meant “gray area,” after all, however that’s how issues at all times appear to go for Hernandez — even compliments have a method of backfiring on him.
West was Hernandez’s crew chief for about 5 years, till July 2011, when the league took the irregular step of splitting up a crew midseason as a result of, in line with West’s account of the reason he acquired from M.L.B., the duo have been “too strong together.” The league declined to remark, however the proof within the second suggests it was as a result of they have been tossing guys out of video games as in the event that they have been throwing fish in Seattle. In the eight days main as much as the All-Star break, they’d 5 ejections, 4 of which have been by Hernandez. “There’s a difference between handling a situation with an ejection, and having an ejection and mishandling a situation,” Reynolds says. “And if your first thing was just to take the revolver out and start shooting, or getting to that point where [players say], ‘You can’t talk to this guy,’ ‘This guy’s not listening,’ ‘This guy’s looking for a problem’ — once you develop that reputation, it’s hard to come back from it.” (Reynolds was lately rehired by M.L.B. as an umpire supervisor.)
Ron Darling spent each pitch of his 13-year profession negotiating the semi-haphazard strike zones of M.L.B. umpires, however his father was a highschool umpire, and he witnessed the abuse his dad absorbed, so he has a deep respect for them. The discourse round Hernandez, he says, “has gotten to a point where if he was perfect for five games, no one would give him any credit. I think he’s stuck in, like, a time warp, you know? He’s stuck being authoritarian in a game that rarely demands it anymore.”
