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Old Thu Aug 19, 2004, 11:32pm
Dave Hensley Dave Hensley is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2000
Posts: 768
Quote:
Originally posted by TBBlue
Didn't see it. But West must have judged him to have stopped the delivery to the plate. His timing determined that the two seconds was too long. Once he deceived Joe, it follows he deceived the batter. Judgement call. IP. Play. Protest wouldn't fly if outcome of game had been altered, because we are dealing with judgement.

West has been around too long for someone to win an argument against him that he judged the pitcher to have stopped. Right, Wrong, or in the middle, in Joe West's judgement, he stopped the delivery to the plate.

[Edited by TBBlue on Aug 19th, 2004 at 11:24 PM]
Notwithstanding your apparent defense of the call based on West's "judgment," would you please cite the OBR rule upon which this judgment has supposedly been based?

Thanks.
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