“Cowboy” Joe West: baseball legend retires

After a 45 year career and a record 5460 regular season games, controversial MLB umpire Joe West has hung up his chest protector for the last time

Jeffrey May

Jeffrey MayJeff_DiarioASUpdate: Feb 4th, 2022 20:06 EST

After a 45 year career and a record 5460 regular season games, controversial MLB umpire Joe West has hung up his chest protector for the last time

A baseball legend has left the building, a master of his craft and as divisive as anyone who has ever taken the field, “Cowboy” Joe West has officially announced what he hinted at in October: he has called his last game. Fan opinion has always been divided on Joe West, usually depending on what call he made when your team was playing, but there is no escaping the fact that he was one of a kind.

MLB umpire Joe West has officially retired. pic.twitter.com/Sji66PJioZ

— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) February 4, 2022

The North Carolina native began his major league umpiring career in 1976 with a late-season game between the Atlanta Braves and the Houston Astros. He cultivated a rockstar personality both on the field and off, rubbing some baseball fans the wrong way. Off the field, he recorded two country music albums, appeared in two movies and played on the Celebrity Players Golf Tour.

Last May, he surpassed Bill Klem’s record of 5,375 regular season games and retires as MLB’s all-time leader in games called, with 5,460. He admitted that setting the MLB record was his goal this past season. “I thought I would do it last year but the season got a little messed up and I don’t think it was right to work until the point of the record then just quit,” West told ESPN back in October.

“I thought I would do it last year but the season got a little messed up and I don’t think it was right to work until the point of the record then just quit”

Joe West

Reactions to West’s retirement were mixed on social media. His epic stare-down against Giants pitcher Madison Bumgarner in 2015 and his tossing of Cubs right fielder Andre Dawson in 1991 have stirred up feelings that he tried to be the center of attention too often.

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But the rub is this: Joe was right. In both of these examples, and many others that you can dredge up, the players were emotional and petulant and, I’m sorry to say this to Hall of Famer Andre Dawson especially, completely in the wrong. The rules of baseball are clear, arguing with an umpire is illegal. Joe West was an excellent ball-strike caller. His knowledge of the rules was impeccable.