if you read the thread as you claimed to have done, clearly my question to Reggie was a follow up to my post immediately preceeding in which I made a point about the boderline pitch never going the Cubs way. reply to any post you want, but expect similar reactions when you jump in to answer questions specifically directed to someone else. try to deflect all you want, but you clearly had attitude. I understand that you may not have known that Reggie was a Cardinal fan because he doesn't post often and is generally a respectful poster. but maybe, just maybe, if you don't understand the context of a post, you shouldn't reply. again, maybe you should know the entire context. the ball strike calls were terrible the entire game. the Glaus homerun is directly attributable to missed strike three calls. and again, my primary point is not about Hollandworth. yes, that pitch is close enough to be a strike. it was also far enough off the plate to be a ball, and had been called a ball throughout the course of the game. you completely misconstrued what I said. I said you were standing in the shoes of a Cardinal fan when you jumped into answer the question directed at Reggie. I'll grow up and stop making stupid insinuations when you learn how to read. and please use the eyeroll a little more often. it makes for such pleasurable discourse and drives home your point so well. of course they are, and you and I are as well. but my point is that Len and Bob call a spade a spade. they generally are not homers and call it straight up. its not like the broadcasters on the otherside of town who call it one way, and they're not like the broadcasters last year who refused to acknowledge how badly Alou was getting hosed all year. they call em as they see em and my reference to their comment was meant to reinforce that the pitch was outside according to two objective observers. And most baseball people will tell you that with two strikes, you've gotta protect the plate. And that means sometimes swinging at borderline pitches. And if the ump was as inconsistent as you and others say, Holly should've recognized this and altered his plate approach. By the way, Holly has struck out in 7 of his last 8 ABs. That should tell people how well he's seeing the ball. you just don't get that I am not discussing one single at bat. there is plenty of discussion on this board about how bad the Cubs are at taking walks. plenty of baseball people will tell you that its nearly impossible to take a walk when the borderline strike never goes your way. not only do you not get the ball called, you then have to swing at that pitch the next time it comes. I am in no way sticking up for Hollandworth. however, I do empathise with him for that particular AB. that AB is reminiscient of the Corey Patterson syndrome I witnessed earlier this year. a batter who is swinging wildly at balls who finally takes a couple balls in an AB, and they are called strikes anyway. I have been watching Cubs baseball for about 30 years now, and see this same treatment from the umps year after year. I watched the replay of the Sandberg game last night, and without the emotion that comes from not knowing the outcome of the game, I saw several ridiculous strike calls that benefitted rookie John Cintranella. I saw should be Hall of Famer Bruce Sutter get two charity strikes that nearly ended the game and would have left Ryno in the on deck circle to end the game. the only year I did not see it was 2001 when those calls actually seemed to even out. this is to me is not an argument about one single AB or one single game, it is an editorial about officiating in baseball. the debate happens in all sports. basketball with one sided foul calls on behalf of Duke and the Lakers, hockey with one sided penalty calls on behalf of the RedWings and Avalanche, and football with selective holding and pass interference calls (one which I am sure you vehemently deny since your team is so often the beneficiary). its not an absurd notion, nor a claim of conspiracy. perhaps its an area for psychology, but the fact is the uniform is often the determining factor in sports officiating, and I am sick of my favorite team coming out on the short end of the stick, game after game, year after year.