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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Umpire Odds & Ends: 2012 Ejections Down 16% from 2011

2012 umpire ejection stats are down from last year: With 1,827 games down and 603 to go in the 2012 regular season, umpires have ejected 131 players, managers and coaches, or about once every 13.95 games. By this point in the 2011 season, umpires had recorded 156 ejections or once every 11.71 contests. By the end of 2011, however, that rate had cooled to just once per 12.21 contests.
2011: Two umpires (Davidson/Layne) eject the same manager...

To figure out why this might be, let us break down the numbers. For accuracy's sake, all following data was gathered through 1,827 games in 2011 and 2012.

By Reason for Ejection
2011: Balls/Strikes (76), Safe/Out (36), Throwing At (18), Balk (7), Fight (6), Int/Obstruct (4), Fair/Foul (1).
2012: Balls/Strikes (67), Safe/Out (30), Fair/Foul (8), Throwing At (7), Balk (5), Fight (1).

Both this season and last, pitch location and check swings provided the bulk of ejections followed by whether a runner was safe or out. Giving credence to the Commissioner's remarks regarding instituting video instant replay review for bullets hit down the first and third base lines, 2012 has seen eight fair/foul ejections whereas 2011 saw just one to this point, or 6.1% (2012) to 0.6% (2011).

By Quality of Correctness
2011: Correct (115), Incorrect (41) // Correct (88), Incorrect (41), Irrecusable (27) = 68.2% Accuracy
2012: Correct (59), Incorrect (50), Irrecusable (22) = 54.1% Accuracy

The fact that 2011 accuracy to this point was 14.4% higher than the 2012 figure, combined with a decrease in ejections in 2012, indicates that players and managers may be choosing their battles more wisely and in turn, may be correct more often. Irrecusable figures in 2011 were appropriately 123% higher than in 2012, which is statistically similar to the increased 2011 ejections compared to 2012 of 156 vs. 131 (119%).

By Team
2011: TB 12; BOS 10; HOU 9; WSH 8; CHC, TEX 7; ATL, BAL, DET, KC, LAD, TOR 6 ... CIN 0.
2012: LAD 11; BOS, DET 9; NYM 7; KC, MIL 6; CLE, CWS, TEX, TOR 5 ... WSH 0.

The ejection power players have changed from 2011 to 2012, with the Los Angeles Dodgers rocketing from T-7th to 1st place and the Washington Nationals dropping from 4th to 30th place, the Rays from 1st to having just three to this point in 2012—the only team that appears to have maintained a consistent trend of getting ejected has been the turmoil-plagued Boston Red Sox, whose 10 ejections through 1,827 MLB games in 2011 converted to nine in 2012.

By Umpire
2011: Rob Drake (9), Bob Davidson (7), Mike Estabrook (6), Mike Muchlinski (5), Marty Foster (5).
2012: Darling (6), Tschida (5), Holbrook (5), Foster (5), Reyburn (5), Campos (5), Knight (5).

In 2011, several specific umpires ejected many players each; Drake's nine ejections by Game 1,827 stood until season's end, while Davidson and Wendelstedt tied for second place with eight apiece. Joe West came in fourth with seven heave-hos. This year, however, Davidson went back to uniform #61 and back down to just four ejections. West, meanwhile is at two and Wendelstedt at one, though in 2011, Hunter was helped by a second-half surge that saw him rise from zero to eight in just 2.5 months. Yet in our Game 1,827 leading group, we are seeing more crew chiefs doling out discipline this season than last, indicating some difference in ejection trends regarding MLB umpiring's on-field leadership team.

Temperature & Climate Paradox
According to baseball theory (and proven in criminology), warm weather corresponds to increased ejection activity. Why then, have we seen fewer ejections in 2012—a record warm year—than in 2011—a year whose warmth ranked lower than 2012? According to the NOAA, July of 2012 was associated with a national temperature rank of 118, indicating record levels of warmth, compared to July of 2011, which was associated with a rank of 115. June also was warmer in 2012 (105-94) as were both May (117-28) and April (116-81).

Atmosphere & Situation Handling
Has umpire personality caused a decrease in ejections? On Monday, Adrian Johnson gave Mets batter Jordany Valdespin a lengthy rope after arguing a close play at first base, though for every such tale, there seems to be another filled with media-fueled controversy.

All in all, ejections are down—156 to 131 is concrete and clearly proves that, though the reasons for this decrease are multiple and, as always, open to a wide scope of interpretation.

9 comments:

  1. Okay but I do take issue with "Correct" and "incorrect" / There have been several that this board ruled "incorrect" that were clearly at best inconclusive... while it is not life or death it does change the numbers.

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  2. Gil

    Any chance we will have video for the last 2 ejections?

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  3. There seem to be far fewer bench-clearing incidents than in the past.

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  4. @ Anon 8:46

    Yep. I believe there have been no mound-chargings in the Majors yet this year. On the bright side, there has been a plethora of ejections lately, so maybe the pace will pick up the remainder of the year.

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  5. Please make a post about this:

    http://www.cbssports.com/mlb/blog/scott-miller/19856253/umpire-joyce-makes-the-best-call-of-the-year----before-the-game

    Truly awesome.

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  6. http://mlb.mlb.com/video/play.jsp?content_id=24069317&topic_id=34874412

    Might wanna post this as well. Phenomenal play, phenomenal call, phenomenal situation handling. Well done Adrian Johnson!

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  7. Re: The video Joe posted

    We get on the broadcasters a lot for incompetent commentary (and rightfully so), in this case I think the Rockies announcers should get a tip of the cap for a job well done (except for initially confusing Johnson with Lance Barksdale).

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  8. Did you here about a Jim Joyce saving a woman's life by performing CPR on her at Chase Field

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  9. While season totals seem like a reasonable snap shot, just like players, it's not. The umpire stats compared to this year prove just that. With any kind of data, any kind of subject, wide swings can prove nothing but the data field is too small.
    Players never get to the Hall based of 1 season. Players have bad seasons, (gasp) umpires can suffer a similar fate.
    The seasons stats so far, are no more important than the high and low temps for last year.

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