Thu Jan 01, 2009, 03:01pm
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Lakeside, California
Posts: 6,724
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Quote:
Originally Posted by greymule
I *think* that some versions of softball allow two outs on this play.
ASA, Fed, and NCAA all differ in how they deal with BOO.
Example:
B1 singles. B3 hits into a double play. Defense appeals that B2 should have batted.
ASA: Double play counts, B2 out for failing to bat in proper order. Three outs, B4 leads off next inning. (Two batters, three outs.)
Fed [unless they have changed their rule since 2002]: Runner (B1) out on the force at 2B. B2 out for failing to bat in the proper order. Two outs. B3 bats again.
NCAA follows OBR: B2 out, B1 returns to 1B, B3 bats again.
There are other differences: bases loaded, B5 bats instead of B4. Ball 4 to B5 is in the dirt and bounces off F2's shinguard and into DBT. Defense appeals that B4 should have batted. In ASA, B4 is out, runners return TOP, and B5 bats again. In NCAA, B4 is out, but the runners are still awarded a base on the ball entering DBT. B5 now bats. (I don't know how Fed would rule on that play.)
I doubt that many of you do YSISF, but they have their own unique rule set for BOO. Very severe penalties for violations.
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But where is the example that DG stated, where it was the first batter of the inning who grounded out that batted out of order? I can't imagine more than one out awarded in any code. Please someone give an example of when there can be two outs called for the wrong leadoff batter.
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25
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