THE STRIKE ZONE
Sometimes Sports, Sometimes Sportsmanship
By Jack FurlongFounder/President/CEO During the 2025 baseball scrimmage season, I began a new task for my chapter of evaluating my umpire colleagues from the stands. My job consisted of going to games, sitting in the bleachers, observing the umpires, taking notes, and then submitting reports. It’s not that bad of a gig to make a little money to watch baseball!
On the first day of this new gig, I was sitting in the stands at a local varsity game watching a scrimmage between two parochial schools. After about fifteen minutes, a father sitting near me (who had been conversing with some other parents near him) turned to me to ask if I was scouting one of the teams. “I’m scouting umpires,” I replied with a smile. “I thought you looked familiar,” he said. “You’re an umpire, too, right?” “Yes,” I said. “You know where I remember you from?” he asked as I cringed at his poor grammar. “Perhaps an optometrist’s office?” I joked. “Two years ago,” he replied. “Remember that call you blew against us?” The smile that was on my face from just a simple exchange and my silly joke was gone. I remembered the game in question well. However, I was not about to go down that road. I was technically “on the clock” and had a responsibility to represent my organization in public while I did my job. About fifteen minutes later, I had thankfully seen enough of the varsity game and wanted to go watch the junior varsity game. I wished the fans well and went on my way. My walk to the other field, though, was not without deep thought. Why would the parent of a teenager still remember one specific play and one specific call in one specific game from two seasons prior? I’m sure it’s possible the gentleman could have simply had a memory like an encyclopedia and the social skills of a toddler, which explains why he thought it was a good idea to mention it to me in public. The more likely reason, however, is that this parent was exhibiting something that points to why our mission at OSIP is terribly important. Parents and fans can frequently live so vicariously through their children and their favorite sports teams. They project themselves onto another person or another entity so strongly that they physically become part of them. Much like how a fan of a professional sports team might get personally insulted by a call made by an official during a game, a parent can get personally insulted if the same thing occurs in a situation involving their child. In both scenarios, however, the parents and fans neglect one thing: the sun will still rise tomorrow. The call made against your kid or your team is not the end of the world. No official wakes up in the morning with the desire to make a bad call that upsets parents or fans. There are an infinite number of other things in life that are more important than that one moment in time and that one experience. Why, then, did this parent feel so strongly about this that he had to mention it to me that day? The possibilities are endless. Perhaps the pain of that moment was viciously imprinted on his soul. Perhaps he sought that one opportunity to claim a pound of flesh for something he considered to be an injustice. Or perhaps the father wanted to demonstrate his status as a wealthy person (since he was probably paying a large sum of money to send his kid to a parochial school) that he felt it was important to let me know that I was a peon compared to him. Regardless of the true reason, the moral of the story remains the same: sometimes, maybe we should move beyond these moments and see the forest for the trees.
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