Umpires announced for Tennessee-Campbell game

Umpires announced for the Tennessee-Campbell baseball game.

The NCAA Tournament started Friday with regional play.

The Vols are the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and are hosting the Knoxville Regional at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

Alabama State, Campbell and Georgia Tech are also competing in the Knoxville Regional. The Vols (54-7) will play Campbell on Saturday (7 p.m. EDT, SEC Network).

The winner of the Knoxville Regional will play the winner of the Statesboro Regional in Super Regional play.

Georgia Southern, Notre Dame, Texas Tech and UNC Greensboro are competing in the Statesboro Regional.

NCAA Tournament Knoxville Regional: Umpires for Tennessee-Campbell game

HP: Joe Maiden
1B: Casey Moser
2B: Greg Street
3B: Sal Giacomontonio

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Umpires announced for Tennessee-Alabama State game

Umpires announced for the Tennessee-Alabama State baseball game.

The NCAA Tournament started Friday with regional play.

The Vols are the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and are hosting the Knoxville Regional at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

Alabama State, Campbell and Georgia Tech are also competing in the Knoxville Regional. The Vols (53-7) will play Alabama State (34-23) on Friday (6 p.m. EDT, SEC Network).

The winner of the Knoxville Regional will play the winner of the Statesboro Regional in Super Regional play.

Georgia Southern, Notre Dame, Texas Tech and UNC Greensboro are competing in the Statesboro Regional.

NCAA Tournament Knoxville Regional: Umpires for Tennessee-Alabama State game

HP: Sal Giacomontoni
1B: Joe Maiden
2B: Wilson Raynor
3B: Casey Moser

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Umpires announced for Tennessee-Florida championship game

Umpires announced for the Tennessee-Florida baseball championship game.

The Southeastern Conference Tournament is taking place Tuesday-Sunday at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, Alabama.

Tennessee won the SEC regular season championship and is the No. 1 seed.

Tennessee defeated No. 8 Vanderbilt, 10-1, on Thursday. The Vols were victorious against No. 4 LSU, 5-2, on Friday.

Tennessee advanced to the SEC Tournament championship game with a 12-2 win against No. 12 Kentucky on Saturday.

The Vols will play No. 7 Florida Sunday at 3 p.m. EDT (ESPN2).

SEC Tournament championship game: No. 1 Tennessee-No. 7 Florida score predictions

Tennessee announces uniform combination for SEC championship game

SEC championship game: Tennessee-Florida starting pitchers announced

Umpires for Tennessee-Florida

  • HP: Kevin Sweeney
  • 1B: Scott Kennedy
  • 2B: Jeff Head
  • 3B: Brandon Cooper

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Did an MLB umpire bait Madison Bumgarner into a first inning ejection?

This is a pretty bad look for umpire Dan Bellino

Madison Bumgarner has pitched in the Major Leagues for more than a decade. He’s known as a fiery competitor with a wicked arm. It’s why teams love him, why fans want to see him and why opponents often have trouble with his stuff.

In the first inning of Wednesday’s matinee between the Diamondbacks and Marlins, that famous temper boiled over—but the reason for it sure seemed like a deliberate attempt by an umpire looking for a reason to toss Arizona’s ace.

Here’s some quick background: After giving up a leadoff home run to Miami’s Jon Berti, MadBum bounced right back to induce pop-ups on Jesus Aguilar and Jorge Soler. The starter thought he’d ended the frame with a strikeout to Garrett Cooper, but home plate umpire Ryan Willis (rightfully) called it a ball as Bumgarner started to walk off the mound before angrily returning. After getting Cooper to fly out to right on the next pitch, MadBum walked towards the dugout to meet first base ump Dan Bellino for the routine foreign substance check after every frame. Then things went off the rails.

Many observers believe Bellino baited MadBum during the incident. A closer look at the video shows Bellino staring straight into Bumgarner’s eyes as he continues rubbing the pitcher’s hand. Bumgarner appears to sarcastically tell Bellino to “take your [expletive] time” which immediately led to him getting run from the game.

The Diamondbacks’ broadcast went back to show the difference between the foreign substance checks of Bumgarner and Marlins’ starter Elieser Hernandez and the tape speaks for itself.

Sure, Bumgarner was already angry after a disappointing inning, but that’s nothing new. He’s been in the league so long that umpires generally understand how he operates. What stands out here is how Bellino seemingly escalated things—which players and fans quickly pointed out.

No one pays to go watch umpires at work. They do pay to see generational talents like Bumgarner—especially when he’s likely making his only start in South Florida this year. Adding to the frustration is that it completely changes the outcome of the game.

The Marlins loaded the bases and plated two runs the following inning as Corbin Martin was summoned to take over on the mound with little time to warm up.

Even more unfortunate is how unlikely we are to hear Bellino’s side of things. We already know that Bumgarner would probably earn himself a fine for daring to talk about bad officiating.

The whole situation is just a confusing bummer and so easily avoidable.

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Umpire Pat Hoberg came stunningly close to calling a perfect game behind the plate

Missed the first pitch and was PERFECT the rest of the way.

We’ve been pretty quick to call out umpires when they have a bad day, especially when it comes to Angel Hernandez who is consistently terrible. But sometimes, you just have to tip the cap to an undeniably great performance.

Umpire Pat Hoberg had one of those games on Monday night in Denver.

If it wasn’t for the first pitch of the game, Hoberg would have pulled off a perfect game calling balls and strikes behind the plate. According to Umpire Scorecards, Hoberg correctly called 122 of the 123 taken pitches correctly in the Rockies’ 4-1 win over the Phillies. His only miss was a borderline pitch that, again, came on the first pitch of the game.

This was that lone missed call:

It wasn’t even that bad.

Baseball could certainly benefit from an automated strike zone because performances like that from Hoberg are so far from the norm. But hey, Hoberg should take a bow. He rolled up to Coors Field and did an excellent robot ump impression.

MLB fans deservedly gave him plenty of recognition for the great night.