Quote:
Originally Posted by greymule
1. If INT occurs before the BR reaches 1B, all runners not out return TOP unless forced.
2. Runner who has crossed the plate at the time of intentional INT to break up a double play on a fly ball should be considered the runner closest to home.
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1. That is the result of this play 99.999% of the time anyway. In that .001% where a runner has reached the next base before the interference, then the interference obviously had no effect on that runner's advance. Why penalize a runner that otherwise legally aquired a base?
2. Kind of the same answer...if the runner had already crossed the plate before the interference, then the interference had no bearing on the run scoring.
These two would give the offense a "double whammy", when "one whammy" should be enough!