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Old Thu Jul 16, 2009, 10:36am
ronald ronald is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 746
Quote:
Originally Posted by NCASAUmp View Post
ASA RS #17 says if a thrown ball strikes loose equipment belonging to the offense, it's an immediate dead ball. If it belongs to the defense, it's two bases from time of throw.

On a fair batted ball, it again depends on who owns the equipment. If it's the offense's equipment, all runners return to their bases at time of pitch, and the BR is awarded 1B. Runners advance, if forced. If it belongs to the defense, all runners (including the BR) are awarded two bases.

The exception to all of this is if it's equipment that's SUPPOSED to be in the game that inadvertently falls off the player (ie., a runner's helmet that falls off while they run the bases). The two keys are whether or not the equipment is supposed to be on the field, and whether or not it simply fell off (vs. being intentionally removed).

It's possible the DVD was referring to equipment that had accidentally fallen off of a player.

Both cases above, Dave, ball is dead. In this sit, ball remains live.

You do programming and it is logic based. In addition, the sentence introduces a specific particular (ricochets) and an unmodified noun (equipment). Logically then, it means any and all, a universal not a particular (offensive or defensive). That is how I read it.

For you UIC's, what do you make of this?
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