Will Little
Will Little | |
---|---|
Little talking with Hanley Ramírez in 2015 | |
Born: (1984-03-02) March 2, 1984 (age 40) Fall Branch, Tennessee, U.S. | |
MLB debut | |
June 24, 2013 | |
Crew Information | |
Umpiring crew | 12 |
Crew members |
|
Career highlights and awards | |
Special Assignments |
William Max Little III (born March 2, 1984) is an American Major League Baseball umpire. He was promoted to a full-time position in February 2015.[1] He attended Science Hill High School in Johnson City, Tennessee, then studied biology at Milligan College, where he continued playing baseball.[2]
Little worked his first postseason assignment in 2016, working in the 2016 American League Wild Card Game.
Little was the first base umpire when Albert Pujols of the Los Angeles Angels hit his 600th career home run against the Minnesota Twins on June 3, 2017.[3]
For the 2018 regular season he was found to be a Top 10 performing home plate umpire in terms of accuracy in calling balls and strikes. His error rate was 7.66 percent. This was based on a study conducted at Boston University where 372,442 pitches were culled and analyzed.[4]
He wears #93.[5]
References
- ^ "Umpire Tim McClelland retires, MLB hires 3 umps full time". ESPN.com. Associated Press. February 20, 2015. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
- ^ Williams, Trey (February 28, 2015). "Little born to be major-league umpire". Johnson City Press. Retrieved July 12, 2015.
- ^ "Twins 2, Angels 7 (Final Score) on MLB Gameday | MLB.com". MLB.com.
- ^ "MLB Umpires Missed 34,294 Ball-Strike Calls in 2018. Bring on Robo-umps?". BU Today. Retrieved June 29, 2019.
- ^ "MLB Umpire Bios | MLB.com". MLB.com.
External links
- Retrosheet
- Close Call sports
- v
- t
- e
- Ryan Additon (67)
- Erich Bacchus (12)
- Jordan Baker (71)
- Sean Barber (29)
- Lance Barksdale (23)
- Lance Barrett (16)
- Scott Barry (87)
- Adam Beck (38)
- Dan Bellino (2)
- Ryan Blakney (36)
- Cory Blaser (89)
- C. B. Bucknor (54)
- Vic Carapazza (19)
- Mark Carlson (6)
- Nestor Ceja (33)
- Chris Conroy (98)
- Phil Cuzzi (10)
- Ramon De Jesus (18)
- Laz Díaz (63)
- Rob Drake (8)
- Bruce Dreckman (1)
- Doug Eddings (88)
- Paul Emmel (50)
- Mike Estabrook (83)
- Chad Fairchild (4)
- Andy Fletcher (49)
- Tripp Gibson (73)
- Manny Gonzalez (79)
- Chris Guccione (68)
- Adam Hamari (78)
- Ángel Hernández (5)
- Pat Hoberg (31)
- James Hoye (92)
- Marvin Hudson (51)
- Dan Iassogna (58)
- Adrian Johnson (80)
- Brian Knight (91)
- Ron Kulpa (46)
- Jerry Layne (24)
- Nic Lentz (59)
- John Libka (84)
- Will Little (93)
- Shane Livensparger (43)
- Nick Mahrley (48)
- Alfonso Márquez (72)
- Ben May (97)
- Bill Miller (26)
- Brennan Miller (55)
- Malachi Moore (44)
- Gabe Morales (47)
- Edwin Moscoso (32)
- Mike Muchlinski (76)
- Brian O'Nora (7)
- Roberto Ortiz (40)
- Alan Porter (64)
- David Rackley (86)
- Tony Randazzo (11)
- Jeremie Rehak (35)
- D. J. Reyburn (17)
- Mark Ripperger (90)
- Stu Scheurwater (85)
- Chris Segal (96)
- Todd Tichenor (13)
- Carlos Torres (37)
- Alex Tosi (66)
- John Tumpane (74)
- Junior Valentine (25)
- Larry Vanover (27)
- Jansen Visconti (52)
- Clint Vondrak (15)
- Mark Wegner (14)
- Hunter Wendelstedt (21)
- Chad Whitson (62)
- Ryan Wills (20)
- Quinn Wolcott (81)
- Jim Wolf (28)
This biographical article relating to an American baseball umpire is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e