Ángel Hernández (umpire)

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55 – Ángel Hernández

Angel Hernandez
Born: (1961-08-26) August 26, 1961
Havana, Cuba
MLB debut
1991
Umpiring crew
N
Crew members
  Dana DeMuth (crew chief)
  Ángel Hernández
  Paul Nauert
  Doug Eddings
Career highlights and awards
Special Assignments

Ángel Hernández (born August 26, 1961) is an umpire for Major League Baseball. He worked in the National League from 1991 to 1999, and has worked throughout Major League Baseball since 2000.

Umpiring career

Hernández has umpired in the World Series in 2002 and 2005, as well as the 1999 All-Star Game. He has officiated in four League Championship Series two in each league (2000, 2001, 2003, 2004), and in seven League Division Series (1997, 1998, 2002, 2005, 2009, 2011, 2012). Hernandez also worked Game 7 of the 2008 ALCS as an injury fill-in. Hernández wears the uniform number 55 (He wore number 5 while in the National League, but the number was taken by Dale Scott when the umpires were consolidated under MLB in 2000).[2]

Controversies

In a 1999 Major League Baseball Players Association survey, Hernández was ranked 31st out of 36 National League umpires.[3] However, later that year, Hernández was asked to return for the 2000 season while 13 of his NL colleagues were let go. Given his ranking, the Philadelphia Inquirer termed the retention of Hernández one of the "surprises" of the 1999 purge.[4]

Hernández has been involved in several incidents with players. On August 7, 2001, he ejected a guest singer of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" at Wrigley Field. The ejectee was former Chicago Bears player Steve McMichael, who had taken a shot at Hernandez's umpiring over the PA system after being introduced as the guest singer.[5]

Hernández in 2011.

On July 17, 2006, Hernández was the third base umpire and ejected Dodgers' first base coach Mariano Duncan. When Duncan came out of the dugout to argue the ejection, he tossed his cap onto the ground in anger. Immediately after his peers brought Duncan back into the dugout, Hernández picked up the cap and tossed it to a fan in the stands.[6] The next day, Duncan taped his cap to his head before delivering the Dodgers' lineup to the umpires.[7]

A 2006 Sports Illustrated poll of Major League players listed Hernandez as the third worst umpire in MLB.[8]

Hernández has had multiple confrontations with infielder Julio Lugo. In April 2007, Lugo attempted to call timeout and stepped out of the batter's box as the pitcher went into his windup, and Hernández called the resulting pitch a strike.[lower-alpha 1] This began an argument between Lugo and Hernández, but did not result in any ejection. On May 27, 2008, Lugo was among multiple Red Sox who asked for a check swing ruling from Hernández, though as the third base umpire, he was unable to provide a ruling unless requested by the home plate umpire. A confrontation ensued, resulting in Lugo's ejection from the game. Hernández subsequently ejected Red Sox manager Terry Francona when the latter came out to argue Lugo's ejection.[9]

On June 1, 2010, Hernández ejected Joe Maddon after the latter argued a Carlos Peña request for "Time" that was not granted pursuant to the aforementioned Rule 6.02(b) prohibiting late requests for "Time," resulting in a ninth inning strikeout.[10]

For the second half of the 2011 baseball season, Hernández was moved from the umpiring crew of Joe West to the crew of Gerry Davis.[11]

On May 8, 2013, Hernández, serving as crew chief with regular crew chief Dana DeMuth not with the umpiring crew for that series, ruled a ninth inning ball batted by Athletics' second baseman Adam Rosales to be a double.[12] Video replays appeared to show the ball hitting a railing in the bleachers above the yellow line, which serves as a divider between home runs and balls still in play. The call of double was upheld despite a video review, with A's manager Bob Melvin getting ejected for arguing and the Athletics losing the game to the Cleveland Indians, 4-3.[13] Athletics players, fans, and sports columnists criticized Hernández in the wake of the call. Major League Baseball later acknowledged that the call was "improper," but that it was too late to overturn it.[14][15]

Notable games

Hernández was behind the plate for the final game at the old Yankee Stadium on September 21, 2008.

Hernández was umpiring at third base when Jered Weaver threw a no-hitter on May 2, 2012.[16]

He was the third base umpire on September 28, 2012, when Homer Bailey of the Cincinnati Reds no-hit the Pittsburgh Pirates.[17]

Notes

  1. OBR Rule 6.02(b) Comment states, in part, "Umpires will not call 'Time' at the request of the batter or any member of his team once the pitcher has started his windup or has come to a set position even though the batter claims 'dust in his eyes,' 'steamed glasses,' 'didn’t get the sign' or for any other cause."[1]

References

  1. "Official Baseball Rules". Major League Baseball. 
  2. The Official Site of Major League Baseball: Official info: Umpires: Roster
  3. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, April 7, 1999
  4. Philadelphia Inquirer, July 30, 1999
  5. McMichael booted from Cubs game
  6. Dodgers lose and may lose Kent to DL
  7. Notes: Little rearranges lineup
  8. Sports Illustrated, June 20, 2006 SI Players Poll
  9. Lugo, Francona Perplexed By Ejections
  10. Crawford's grand slam caps Rays' second straight ninth-inning rally
  11. "Umpire Ejection Fantasy League: Say It Ain't So, Joe". Close Call Sports. July 2011. 
  12. "Hernandez gaffe highlights MLB flaw". 
  13. Withers, Tom (2013-05-08). "Indians edge Athletics 4-3 on controversial call". Associated Press via Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved 2013-05-08. 
  14. Castrovince, Anthony (2013-05-10). "Errors part of game, but it shouldn't be with replay". MLB.com. Retrieved 2013-05-10. 
  15. ESPN News Services (2013-05-10). "MLB: Umpires made 'improper call'". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2013-05-10. 
  16. "Angels' Jered Weaver tosses second no-hitter of season". ESPN. Retrieved 3 May 2012. 
  17. "Reds' Homer Bailey throws no-hitter against Pirates". ESPN. Retrieved 29 September 2012. 

External links

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