Thread: Catch/No Catch
View Single Post
  #6 (permalink)  
Old Thu Feb 21, 2008, 09:53pm
ozzy6900 ozzy6900 is offline
Official Forum Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: CT
Posts: 2,439
Quote:
Originally Posted by Steven Tyler
FED RULES

2.9.1 SITUATION C: B1 hits a fly to F8. F8 gets the ball in his hands but it is dropped (a) when he falls to the ground and rolls over; or (b) when he collides with a fielder or a wall; or (c) when he starts to throw to the infield. RULING: In (a) and (b), it is not a catch. In (c), it is a legal catch if an umpire rules the that the ball was dropped as the fielder voluntarily removed the ball from the glove.

I had a situation today where F8 slid and made a great catch. As he was rolling over and coming to his feet in one motion, he went to reach for the ball in his glove. Before his hand got there, the ball fell to the ground. This happened with two outs and no one on. I called no catch. My question did I make the right call or should I have let it go let?
You were correct as F8 did not demonstrate control because the ball fell out of the glove.

Quote:
Originally Posted by UmpJM (nee CoachJM)
I had one where the batter hit a screaming line drive right back at the pitcher's head - 2 outs & runners on 1st & 3rd. In self-defense, the pitcher managed to get his glove up and glove the ball cleanly. He held it for a fraction of a second and then opened his glove and let the ball fall to the mound and started walking towards his dugout. I ruled it a catch. Should I have, or should I have ruled it no catch?

JM
By opening his glove, dropping the ball and walking away, F1 was showing control and an unmistakable voluntary release. You were correct in your ruling.
__________________
When in doubt, bang 'em out!
Ozzy
Reply With Quote