Jim Joyce: Portrait Of An Umpire As An Honest Man 
Thursday, June 3, 2010 at 2:56PM
John P. Wise in Armando Galarraga, Jim Joyce

Jim Joyce

Veteran Ump Admits Gaffe,
Apologizes To Galarraga

By JOHN P. WISE
One Great Season

Whomever's on the dirty side of Floyd Landis' allegations that Lance Armstrong used performance-enhancing drugs during his cycling reign, I hope you've been able to turn on a television the last 24 hours.

Or any other athlete accused of any type of wrongdoing, really. Whether you're on the embarrassing end of steroid rumors, drug or weapons allegations or perhaps charges that you sexually assaulted a college-age girl at a college bar in a college town, you could probably learn a thing or two from Jim Joyce.

Who's Jim Joyce, you ask?

He's the guy with the worst case of nausea of anyone in America today. And he's probably a bigger man than you are.

What should have been the 27th and final out of Armando Galarraga's perfect game for Detroit Wednesday night was instead mistakenly ruled an infield hit. Umpire Joyce blew the call and he knew it.

He admitted so afterward Wednesday and again before the Tigers' game against Cleveland Thursday afternoon. He was profuse in his remorse, holding back tears and offering up apology after apology. Joyce tipped his cap to Galarraga for his flawless effort, and beat himself up for ruining the young pitcher's accomplishment. He even sought him out after the game to deliver a personal apology ... and a hug.

Americans hate authority. We boo when officials of any sport take the field, court or rink before a game has even started. Not a second has ticked off the clock, yet we've already got a close and critical eye on the men in stripes.

But with Joyce's strong effort to admit his mistake, take the heat like a man and continue to do his job with dignity, something funny has happened. Fellow umpires, colleagues, league officials, managers and players -- even Galarraga -- have expressed their support for Joyce. That's what happens when you're an honest guy. You do it the right way, and eventually good things follow.

Galarraga won't get the due credit for his rare gem, but what's happened since has been nothing short of perfect.

Article originally appeared on onegreatseason (http://onegreatseason.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.