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The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!: The Game as Umpires See It
The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!: The Game as Umpires See It
The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!: The Game as Umpires See It
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The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!: The Game as Umpires See It

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A fascinating and revealing look inside the lives of umpires, from the godfather of creative nonfiction
In 1974, Lee Gutkind walked into Shea Stadium, then home of the New York Mets, with an unusual proposal. He wanted to chronicle one of the least celebrated cadres in professional baseball: the umpires. Gutkind spent one exhilarating season traveling with the officiating crew he found that day—Doug Harvey, Nick Colosi, Harry Wendelstedt, and Art Williams, the first African American umpire in National League history. Gutkind’s narrative reveals much about the peculiarities of the men charged with the “thankless and impossible task of invoking order”—their work ethic, fallibility, and perhaps most strikingly, their pride.
As resonant today as when it was first published, The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand! is an engrossing story of the men who work on one of the nation’s biggest stages, their victories and their failures, and their inner worlds that are rarely—if ever—explored.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 11, 2014
ISBN9781480471368
The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!: The Game as Umpires See It
Author

Lee Gutkind

LEE GUTKIND is the author and editor of more than thirty books, including You Can't Make This Stuff Up: The Complete Guide to Writing Creative Nonfiction and Forever Fat: Essays by the Godfather, and the award-winning Many Sleepless Nights: The World of Organ Transplantation. He has appeared on many national radio and televisions shows, including The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Good Morning America, and National Public Radio’s All Things Considered. He is a professor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh and at Arizona State University.

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    The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand! - Lee Gutkind

    Author

    PREFACE: WILL THE REAL MEN IN BLUE PLEASE STAND UP?

    THE SEPTEMBER 1996 INCIDENT in Toronto in which Baltimore Oriole second baseman Roberto Alomar spit in the face of umpire John Hirschbeck brought back vivid memories of the season I spent with National League baseball umpires researching The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!

    During that year, I attended the majority of the games that the crew about which I wrote (Doug Harvey, Harry Wendelstedt, Art Williams, and Nick Colosi) officiated, plus games involving other National League umpire crews, minor league games, and World Series and All Star games. Because of the nonfraternization practice, I had little to do with the players; I literally immersed myself in the umpire’s narrow world. Umpires tended to avoid the players, which meant that they also avoided the limelight in the cities they visited, staying in smaller hotels and dining at restaurants that players normally did not frequent.

    I had access to the umpires’ locker room in most ballparks in the National League. We often traveled together, dined—and sometimes partied. Their candor about the game, the players, and the pressures under which they worked was enlightening. In our many conversations, they insisted—repeatedly—that somebody (Me!) had to capture the drama of the major league umpire experience for the world to witness and therefore to understand. These were compassionate and engaging men, mostly, with a sincere reverence for a game in which they were always right—even when they were dead wrong. But this is also what bothered me about the umpires: their inability to accept the limitations of their situation. The men I spent time with—Wendelstedt and Harvey especially—rejected any form of criticism. They refused to contemplate the notion that the very nature of their position attracted resentment, disagreement, and controversy. It was acceptable to criticize the president of the United States, players, and celebrities, but on or off the field, disagreement with umpires was not allowed. Don’t ever let them call you horseshit is how Doug Harvey explained it to rookie umpire Art Williams. The umpires were so convinced of their own righteousness that their jokes and barbs concerning ethnicity and race (Art Williams was the first African American umpire in the National League) were supposed to be presumed harmless. Much of their humor was self-deprecating, which allegedly illustrated their magnanimity. Because I understood how sensitive they were—and because I loved the game with great passion—I can honestly say that I made every effort to present the umpires in a positive light. I portrayed them as real people, honorable, hard-working, and dedicated, but with warts and flaws like the rest of us. But they didn’t want to be compared with real people; they wanted to be umpires—on a plateau above most everyone else.

    Since this book was first published, Harvey and Wendelstedt have never once communicated with me. Wendelstedt even denied the fact that I had traveled with him and his crew, though Harvey and Williams signed statements attesting to the fact that I was with them regularly. I gather that the umpires compare me to Benedict Arnold—or Jim Bouton (Ball Four). I regret their response. My book introduced the villains in blue to the general public in ways that made them real, three-dimensional people, with whom fans might empathize. The fact is that the umpires are the only real people remaining in the game, while most every player, manager, and owner has an agent, a publicist, an inflated salary, and a personal agenda. The umpires are the common folk, like the rest of us fans: the guys charged with the thankless and impossible task of invoking order.

    Which brings me back to 1996 and Roberto Alomar and John Hirschbeck. In the end, both men comported themselves well enough. Hirschbeck basically walked away from the incident, while Alomar apologized to Hirschbeck and donated money to a foundation devoted to research into the disease which was to later kill Hirschbeck s young son. Generally, however, the umpires, as a group, reacted with poor judgment, displaying a complete lack of understanding of what their positions signified.

    Instead of seizing the moment and becoming role models, the umpires acted out, calling press conferences, whining and complaining, and threatening to strike if Alomar was permitted to participate in the playoffs and the World Series. (He was given a five-game suspension to be served at the beginning of the following season.) Eventually, the umpires backed down, as everyone (except the umps) suspected they would from the very beginning. I am not alibiing for Alomar, whose action was inexcusable. But the umpires could have displayed character and humility—become icons of a game badly in need of order and dignity. Instead, they behaved as badly as players, which to umpires is the ultimate criticism.

    Umpires walk a difficult line. They want to engender sympathy and understanding on the one hand, but they also elevate themselves to an untouchable plateau on the other. They can’t have it both ways. Umpires needn’t be frightened of revealing themselves as real people with egos and insecurities like everyone else. By acknowledging the complications caused by living in the shadow of the players and by having to cross the line 162 times every year from perfection to fallibility, fans will discover, as did I while writing The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!, a new and exciting dimension to the game.

    L.G.

    1999

    The Beginning of a Difficult Year

    THE 1974 FEUD BETWEEN umpires and major league baseball’s players, coaches, and managers began in April, in one of the coldest springs in baseball history. The Farmer’s Almanac had called for a subpar season, a cold and rainy summer, and its prediction seemed to be coming true. Games in Montreal were being snowed out one after another and the doors to stadiums in Chicago and New York were virtually frozen shut. Temperatures tumbled into the thirties and forties in most major league towns in the eastern portion of the United States, and rain and wind delayed and sometimes ruined many ball games, prompting some managers to consider issuing wetsuits to outfielders and flippers to runners trying to steal second base. Then a Canadian Airlines strike lasting two weeks forced players and umpires trying to get into Montreal to fly into Burlington or Rutland; they had to Greyhound back and forth from Vermont to Montreal.

    Even worse than the weather, however, was the unsettling way in which the season was progressing. The teams that were supposed to be winning were either losing or at least not winning nearly enough. Thus, no matter how cold it was in the cities, the tempers of managers, players, sportswriters, and fans were hot enough to melt glaciers. For umpires such a situation signaled the beginning of a very difficult year.

    In the National League East the Pittsburgh Pirates, favored to come back from their mediocre 1973 season and their shock over the death of superstar outfielder Roberto Clemente, were, with each game they played, sinking deeper into the quicksand of the cellar, while the New York Mets, The Mighty Mites, the 1973 National League champions, were ineptly tumbling and buffooning right behind. By mid-April both teams had managed to win only three of thirteen games. The Philadelphia Phillies, on the other hand, a team of youngsters, a team without a superstar, a team whose fans under forty could hardly remember the last time they had played well, were momentarily in first place one full month after the season had started, while Chicago, Montreal, and St. Louis trampolined back and forth behind.

    Many people thought that Los Angeles had already won the National League West. By mid-May the Dodgers were eight games in front of their closest rivals, playing at a near .700 clip. Pitcher Tommy John had eight wins and two losses and Jimmy Wynn, a reject from the Houston Astros, had already blasted fourteen home runs. What was so frustrating, however, was that three of the five remaining western division teams were also doing well—mostly against their lowly eastern division counterparts. Cincinnati had won six of every ten ball games they played, a record good enough to lead the league most other years, while Atlanta had won twelve games in a row. In all, four of the six western division teams had a higher winning percentage than the league leaders in the east. At one point, only one of the six eastern division teams was playing better than .500 ball.

    Early in the season Ray Kroc, the MacDonald’s hamburger hustler who had recently purchased the San Diego Padres, openly chided his team over the home stadium’s public address system for its bush-league ballplaying. Steve Blass, the 1971 Pittsburgh Pirate World Series hero, twice a runner-up for the Cy Young Award which honors the finest pitcher in the league, was, at thirty-two-years old, optioned to the Charleston Charlies of the AAA International League for his inability to get the ball over the plate. Judge Roy Hofheinz, the mastermind behind the Houston Astrodome and the originator of the idea of dome-topped stadiums, announced that his hometown attendance had so far fallen 300,000 below last year’s. The Astros were one million dollars behind in revenue, just two months after the start of the season.

    By the end of the eighth week, it was clear to all who cared to look that this was going to be a topsy-turvy, dazzlingly different, furious, frenetic, exhilarating, excruciating baseball year.

    There always have been and always will be feuds between players and teams and umpires in baseball, for the umpires are the policemen of the ballpark, the enforcers on the field, and on any one play, especially when it is comparatively close or controversial, an umpire will never please more than 50 percent of his constituency. Often he will please less. This particular year, however, the feud started earlier than usual, perhaps in part because of the weather, but more so because of the unorthodox and unpredictable way in which the teams in the National League were playing.

    For what happens when a team—especially a team familiar with the bright lights and flush of victory—begins to lose ball games with an alarming rate of consistency? If a player were to blame his teammates or coaches, he would make a number of instant enemies and risk being relieved of his position in the starting lineup or his personally polished seat on the bench. And a manager or general manager publicly admitting his own mistakes is, in effect, submitting his own personal resignation. There are only two feasible solutions. First, a team can blame the umpires for unfair and inadequate rulings. Second, the players can blame Providence, Lady Luck, for issuing a continuing series of unfortunate setbacks.

    Luck, of course, is illusionary. Luck has no face or name or color or uniform. It cannot be pinned down. So the players, managers, fans and the press—most particularly the members of the press, who must cast their lot with their home teams and whose readership usually increases or decreases according to the play and the standings of their teams—will, more often than not, select the umpires at whom to level criticism. This makes good copy because every living, breathing baseball fan knows he is supposed to hate the umpires. Umpires are at best necessary evils.

    Criticizing an umpire won’t unnecessarily embarrass a home team or cause a reporter’s sources to be stopped up by moping, vengeful players insulted by negative public exposure. Reporters are heartless in this way. Although their copy may be inflammatory, may break down the discipline of the next ball game following publication of their vitriolic comments or spark a near riot in the stands, they will keep writing these stories as long as grist is available for their daily mill. Although, for obvious reasons, documentation to justify criticism of umpires is almost impossible to obtain, reporters will continue writing their stories whenever a mere whiff of information is available—all season if their team continues to lose—or until their team begins to win. Umpires are sportswriters’ and sportscasters’ best friends because the men in blue are perfect material for an avalanche of attacks.

    The first all-out attack on umpires came in the pages of the New York Daily News and was written by Dick Young, a veteran reporter known for his ability to conjure up controversial news when none is available at deadline time. The game in question was one in which the New York Mets played the Cubs in Chicago. It was officiated by chief Doug Harvey and his crew of Harry Wendelstedt, Nick Colosi, and Art Williams.

    Dave Schneck, a twenty-five-year-old outfielder playing his first full season with the Mets, hit a hard fly ball to deep center field which momentarily seemed to get by pursuing Cub center fielder Rick Monday. At the last minute, though, Monday dove at the ball, landed on his shoulder, somersaulted twice, then came up holding the ball triumphantly, his glove hand high. Second base umpire Nick Colosi, who had followed the ball into center field behind Monday, signaled a clean catch. It was then a simple matter for Monday to lob the ball to Don Kessinger at second base and double up the Met runner, who, never imagining that the ball would be caught, was just then sliding harmlessly into third base. Monday, however, had injured his shoulder on the play. He received a standing ovation when he trotted from the field. None of the Mets—including manager Yogi Berra—complained about the call.

    Two innings later Colosi, who had been bothered by a sore back since the end of last season, switched positions with Art Williams at third.

    In the Daily News the next day, Young ripped Colosi for not going out far enough on the play to see that Monday had actually trapped the ball. Young pointed out that since Colosi had a sore back, he couldn’t possibly have run fast or far enough out into center field to be in a position to call the play accurately. Young, on the other hand, had watched the instant replay on the monitor in the press box. It was clear, Young claimed, that Monday had trapped the ball.

    In the same column, Young quoted Met shortstop Bud Harrelson as saying that three Met losses in April alone could be positively attributed to poor officiating. Young also pointed out that umpires, most particularly at Shea Stadium, were stealing dozens of baseballs each year.

    Harvey, Wendelstedt, Colosi, and Williams took the criticism without public squawking. For one thing, no reporter offered them the opportunity of either denying or confirming Young’s or Harrelson’s claims. For another, while not oblivious to criticism, after having endured so much so often, they were intelligent and controlled enough to limit their complaints to friends and associates.

    Colosi, whose back problems were not a reportorial illusion, admitted, at least to himself, that his reflexes and his speed were somewhat hampered, but he didn’t think it had affected his game. Ailing as he was, he was still quicker than some of the older or fatter umpires in the league. He had seen it right: he was convinced that Monday had caught the ball legitimately. Even if he had been incorrect, Colosi knew that the call was honest and impartial. He didn’t care whether the Mets won or lost. He was just trying to do his job. As to the videotape replay, Colosi knew he had been closer to the play than the camera had; moreover, he had been there at eye-level and at an angle that a camera couldn’t possibly reproduce. Even so, the camera was merely telling the truth—impartially—just as he was. But, considering their different positions, why couldn’t it be the camera that was wrong this time?

    Privately, Doug Harvey was worried. He had been in baseball for eighteen years, long enough to know that the tone of Young’s column and the bitterness of Harrelson’s words might signal the beginning of a dispute that could easily build and rage all season—or at least as long as the Mets were losing. Judging from their shoddy play, it looked like a season-long dilemma. Harvey hadn’t the slightest idea which three games Harrelson was referring to. Certainly the three couldn’t have been umpired by his crew, but now, if past experience served as any kind of guideline, he, Wendelstedt, Colosi, and Williams could very well be made scapegoats for any generalized dissatisfaction either the Mets or the other teams harbored for the league’s umpires. As the targets of the first public attack—especially from a man as influential as Young and from a city as media-conscious as New York—his crew might possibly become the targets of other writers from other towns and of other teams. To say the least, it wasn’t a particularly pleasing prospect.

    No one could tell what Art Williams thought of the situation, for he was characteristically quiet and somewhat aloof through the whole affair.

    But the remaining member of the crew, Harry Wendelstedt, seemed completely unconcerned by the controversy caused by Harrelson’s and Young’s charges. When asked to comment on the situation, Wendelstedt stated:

    Harrelson is a chickenshit shortstop and Young is a corruptible cocksucker. I couldn’t care less about any goddamn horse-ass crap they might have said.

    Hot Foot Harry

    FIRST BASE UMPIRE HARRY Wendelstedt felt the pain only a microsecond after he saw the ball and realized what was going to happen. The low line drive, hit from a Ron Bryant fastball by Met catcher Jerry Grote, shot off the bat like a streaking meteorite and collided with Wendelstedt’s left big toe with a bone-jarring thump. Biting his lip and holding his breath, Wendelstedt waited momentarily for the fire to clear from his eyes, then threw his arm out to the left, signaling foul. Air whistled quietly through his teeth as he watched Grote, who had started running, slowly retreat down the line, pick up his bat, look up at Wendelstedt, and grin.

    That hurtcha, Harry? asked first base coach Roy McMillan, with mock sympathy. Did that hurtcha or did that hurtcha, Harry? McMillan elongated each word as if he were talking to a baby. You sure your poor little foot is still down there, Harry? Coulda been burned right off, you wouldn’t have known the difference, McMillan chuckled.

    C’mon Harry, said Giant first baseman Dave Kingman, smiling and thumping his mitt with his fist, we know it’s killing you. Why don’t you admit it? We ain’t going to laugh.

    Not me, I’m not going to laugh, said McMillan, grinning as if this were the happiest day of his year.

    Why don’t you just take time out and scream, Harry? said Kingman.

    C’mon, Harry, said McMillan, don’t be such a big, bad umpire. We know it hurts so much you want to scream. C’mon, scream!

    Wendelstedt stared silently past his tormentors, down toward the batter’s box and forced out a tight grin, worthy of a bad joke. He was still dizzy with pain. He felt as if his foot had been nailed with a large rusty spike into the reddish-brown dirt of Shea Stadium and, at the same time, as if his toe had been jammed up into his knee, but there was no way he was going to admit it, no way Harry Wendelstedt would give those rats the satisfaction of knowing he had been hurt.

    Thankfully, Bryant’s next pitch was a ball.

    Wendelstedt gradually shifted his weight to his right foot and tried to wiggle the toes on his left. They were hot and stiff, felt sticky and wet. He shut his eyes hard to force away the pain. Then, making it seem as if it were an afterthought, he forced himself to look up and check his position. He was fifteen feet behind the base and straddling the foul line. Just about where the skin of the infield meets the outfield grass. Just right. If there was a man on first, Wendelstedt would have to move in closer to watch for pick-off plays, but as it was, with the bases empty, the umpire had more leeway to follow a ball down the right field foul line. Art Williams, his partner on third, straddled the left field line, about twenty-five feet behind the base. With plenty of time to move laterally up and down the line before a play might reach third, Williams could afford to be more centrally located. Unlike American League umpires, who positioned themselves down the line in foul territory, the National League umpires on first and third stood directly in line with home plate, one foot on the fair side of the line, the other foot foul, belt buckles marking the middle.

    There are other differences between the umpiring styles of the two leagues. For one thing, with men on base, the second base umpire in the National League stands on the infield grass, while the American League umpire stands behind the base on the shallow part of the outfield. Although the National League position increases the danger for an umpire, by putting him closer to the batter where he can easily be hit by a line shot, Wendelstedt felt it enabled him to call a play more accurately, especially on a double-play ball or an attempted steal. The National League umpire is always on the inside of the throw or the inside of the base, facing the infielders’ gloves and the direction of the play, while the American League umpire makes his calls from behind the player’s backs. Thus, with minimum shifting, the National League umpire is always in a better position to see the play more clearly. On the other hand, he is further away from the outfield and has a longer run to make when judging whether a ball has been caught or trapped. There is good and bad in both systems, Wendelstedt admitted, but he mostly disliked the idea that the American League umpire has to move forward and into the play.

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