"The most cowardly thing in the world is blaming mistakes upon the umpires. Too many managers strut around on the field trying to manage the umpires instead of their teams"
About this Quote
Klem’s shot isn’t really aimed at a single hotheaded manager; it’s aimed at a whole performance culture in baseball, where outrage becomes a tactic and scapegoating becomes strategy. Calling it “the most cowardly thing” is deliberately moral language in a sport that loves to pretend it’s only about skill and numbers. He’s saying: the easiest way to protect your ego, your job, and your clubhouse authority is to turn failure into an external conspiracy. You didn’t lose; you were robbed. The crowd gets a villain, the press gets a storyline, and the manager gets to look like he’s “fighting” for his players without actually confronting the roster, the decisions, or the execution.
The subtext is about control. Klem, the era’s most famous umpire, watched managers try to “manage the umpires” because manipulating the boundary between fair and foul can feel more actionable than fixing a slumping lineup. It’s gamesmanship dressed up as righteousness: the argument, the glare, the slow stroll out of the dugout are all meant to plant doubt, sway the next call, or at least change the emotional weather of the game.
Context matters: early 20th-century baseball was still building its authority structures, and umpires were the most visible embodiment of institutional power on the field. Klem insists that power deserves respect not because officials are flawless, but because leadership is revealed in where you place responsibility. His jab at “strut” punctures the macho theatrics: real managing is unglamorous accountability, not public tantrums staged for leverage.
The subtext is about control. Klem, the era’s most famous umpire, watched managers try to “manage the umpires” because manipulating the boundary between fair and foul can feel more actionable than fixing a slumping lineup. It’s gamesmanship dressed up as righteousness: the argument, the glare, the slow stroll out of the dugout are all meant to plant doubt, sway the next call, or at least change the emotional weather of the game.
Context matters: early 20th-century baseball was still building its authority structures, and umpires were the most visible embodiment of institutional power on the field. Klem insists that power deserves respect not because officials are flawless, but because leadership is revealed in where you place responsibility. His jab at “strut” punctures the macho theatrics: real managing is unglamorous accountability, not public tantrums staged for leverage.
Quote Details
| Topic | Management |
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