Longtime ump Andy Zajac is a CEO of Northwest CT baseball games

 

By ,Correspondent

New Hartford resident Andy Zajac is president of the Northwest Connecticut Board of Baseball Umpires, and "CEO" in every baseball game he officiates.

New Hartford resident Andy Zajac is president of the Northwest Connecticut Board of Baseball Umpires, and “CEO” in every baseball game he officiates.

Even more than most good baseball umpires, Andy Zajac carries himself like an amiable corporate CEO unless you try too hard to test him. At 6-feet-2, he is an imposing presence with 48 years of experience with a few long breaks to coach his kids and some 2,500 games behind the plate and on the bases.

At 69, he is in control.

It’s the perfect resume for his peers on the Northwest Connecticut Board of Baseball Umpires to elect him president “for the last four or five years.” It’s also the perfect resume for a long fascinating phone conversation last Friday morning as he drank coffee on the deck of his home in New Hartford. “I love baseball and I still enjoy a great play,” he says while running down an affair with the game that began at age 5, carried him through all-league honors as an infielder at Meriden’s Maloney High School, a Division II scholarship at American International College in Springfield and several more years in Connecticut’s Twilight League.

His playing days ended when he was 30, but baseball continued through coaching a son and daughter in sports, including his role in starting the Northwest Knights in the early days of AAU baseball. Umpiring began when an umpire acquaintance said, “Hey Andy, how about umpiring a middle school game in Cheshire.” He did. He liked it, and then went on to years on the Meriden Board of Umpires, then Waterbury and finally the Northwest Corner. Thirty-four years as risk manager for the Catholic Archdiocese of Hartford, serving 32 parishes and their schools in three counties, including Litchfield County, made him familiar with a wide swath of Connecticut and a schedule that allowed his umpiring. “I enjoy the more intense games,” he said, beginning the more focused part of the conversation about umpires and the qualifications to be a good one. Like CEOs, not everyone can or, more increasingly wants to, do the job. “It’s a dwindling group,” he says. “We have 20 guys we call on consistently out of the 31 on our board. It used to be around 50 and we lost some in the COVID year.

The Tri-State Baseball League playoffs begin this weekend, through the next two weekends. It’s likely to be the last good local summer baseball — and umpiring — you’ll see this summer.

If you go, you might just enjoy it more if you appreciate the art of good umpires as crucial to the romance of the game.

Who knows … you might even consider becoming one.