I don't know that a protest is the way to go. I've always been under the imporession that protests are used to correct misapplications of rules. I don't think this would be considered a misapplication of rules. So in my book a protest is out.
I also think it is too late to correct the situation by cancelling scores or moving runners around/putting them back on base. The issue with that would be how much can we cancel out. What if a following batter had been retired, and the coach brings the situation after this? Do you cancel the run based on a following runner advacing past a previous runner? If so do we start the next inning with the batter that was just retired. What do you do if batter that was batting when the passed ball occured hits a HR? At this point you could rule that the runners switching place wouldn't have mattered regarding the score as they would have all scored because of the HR (I'm not saying this makes what the offense did ok, but just throwing out questions).
I think the only justified response is to eject offensive manager as well as the restricting the runners in question and continuing on. Maybe not the best, but I don't think this is a situation covered in the rules.
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My job is a decision-making job, and as a result, I make a lot of decisions." --George W. Bush
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