The coronavirus pandemic prompted the cancellation of the 2020 World Series and stripped down the 2021 one. There are no international teams. There are few fans and less fanfare.
The pandemic also altered this year’s umpiring crew. Normally, the umpires chosen to work the Little League World Series do it once, and never again. There are 12,000 registered umpires in the Little League system, and the honor should be spread around, the thinking goes. Little League has no Bill Klem, who worked 18 World Series for the big leagues.
Every World Series umpire remembers where they were when they received the one-page invitation in the mail the winter before. The 16 chosen to work in 2020 were pushed to 2021. Given the altered tournament and diminished festivities this year, they were allowed to defer until 2022. All of them did.
“Suddenly, we didn’t have any umpires,” said Tom Rawlings, Little League International’s director of umpire development.
He and others went through memory banks and umpire evaluations to select this year’s crew, all World Series veterans. There are just 12 of them, not 16, because part of this year’s protocol has no line umpires, meaning there are four umpires on the field for each game (one at each base), not six. None are from other countries, another break from tradition. Umpires rarely work games featuring teams from their area, to squelch claims of bias.