Better Know An Umpire: Brian Runge
Welcome to Better Know An Umpire, an effort to educate ourselves on the human elements who have ultimate decision-making power over some 2,500 Major League Baseball games a year. (All cumulative statistics are through the 2011 season, unless otherwise stated.)
Name: Brian Runge
Uniform number: 18
Age: 42
Height/weight: 6-foot-1, 225, pounds
First year as MLB umpire: 1999
Total MLB games worked through 2011: 1,454 (home plate: 369)
Previous experience: Northwest League, Arizona Instructional League, South Atlantic League, California League, Eastern League, Pacific Coast League
Career ejections: Nine
No-hitters called: Two ( Jonathan Sanchez, 2009; Philip Humber's perfect game, 2012)
Over/under record ( 1999-2011): 133-156
Hated in: Queens, Detroit
Notable alleged blown calls: A's-Angels, April 18, 2012; Tigers-Orioles, July 19, 2008.
Claim to fame: Was suspended one game by MLB for bumping Mets manager Jerry Manuel in the chest during an argument in June 2008. (After that, no umpire had been suspended for a similar offense until Bob Davidson last week.)
Scouting report from Major League Umpires' Performance, 2007-2010, by Andy Goldblatt:
Brian Runge keeps getting tougher on hitters. ... If his K/BB goes much higher, pitchers will be able to throw to the on-deck circle and get a strike. ... Despite his enormous strike zone, Runge's R/9 is average. ... Runge's career ejection rate is a remarkably low 0.7 percent.
Scouting report from an angry message board commenter:
Unreal. Most critical game in the past 26 years and a fat fuck that hasn't touched a girl in his life named Brian Runge wants to fuck around with the zone and stroke his fucking pussy ass ego in a big game like this.
Average K/9 ( 2011): 14.6
Average BB/9 ( 2011): 5.4
Sample PITCHf/x strike zone: April 21, 2012. How much did Runge's strike zone factor into Philip Humber's perfect game last month? Humber got a few calls—surely, more than Seattle—but nothing too egregious.
True fact: His dad ( Paul) and grandfather ( Ed) were both MLB umpires, making the Runges the first three-generation umpiring family in baseball history.
On umpiring:
The players test you. You fall into a thing where a young umpire has to prove himself. You have to be a little more aggressive, but you have to be smart about it at the same time. My feeling is, if I show the players respect, they'll respect me. If they see I'm out there working hard, if I'm busting my tail night after night, they'll be a little more forgiving if I kick one. Not a lot and not all of the time, but they'll let it go a little quicker.
Strike 3 call:
To check out other installments of Better Know An Umpire, click here.
How the Patriots Can Upset the Seahawks in Super Bowl LX
Three NBA Trade Deadline Flops That Changed Nothing
These Three NFL Teams Could Have Patriots-Style Turnarounds
WM Phoenix Open Ready for Another Week of Controlled Chaos
- Edmonton Oilers vs. Calgary Flames Feb 4 NHL Betting Picks
- Seattle Kraken vs. Anaheim Ducks Betting Predictions and Picks
- Early Longshot Picks to Win the 2027 College Football National Championship
- UFC 325 Betting Preview: Three Bet Picks for Saturday Night
- Best NBA Betting Picks and Predictions for Thursday, January 29
- Wednesday Jan. 28 NBA Best Betting Picks, Predictions
- Rangers vs Islanders Jan. 28 NHL Betting Pick and Predictions

