Quote:
Originally Posted by ManInBlue
Tonight I called my first strike on a batter without him being in the box. I told the coach to break it up "Let's go, coach" twice, neither of them moved. I said "let's play" and called stike one!! He had just told my partner and me that we were both wrong because the BU called an out on appeal for R2 leaving 2B too soon AND he called the catch in right center. I confirmed that he was in the correct position and it was indeed his call - "you're both wrong" He then proceeded to carry on this conversation with his next batter.
Actually, the pitcher and cather responded rather well. I said "let's play" the pitcher took the rubber and delivered a pitch - I had already called the strike however. (actually his pitch was a strike, so that worked out nicely!)
Coach asked me at the end of the 1/2 inning if I new how many times he'd seen that called in 25 years. I said "once"
Never thought I'd call it, but I felt justified in this case.
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Just a quick question. Was the ball dead or live when you enforced the penalty? If the coach had requested time and refused to end the coach/batter conference I more than likely would had a little conversation with the coach and then proceed from there. A possible restriction or ejection could be looming on the horizon.
I don't have a rule or case book handy, so I can't comment on what actually enforcing the penalty in this situation is. Could this border on being the same as adding a ball to the batter if coach didn't leave the mound in a timely matter?
The reason I ask is, there are three things needed to actually put the ball in play, pitcher on the mound with ball, catcher in his box and batter in his box.
My take. Ball dead, converse with coach on the possible consquences. Ball live, enforce penalty by adding a strike to the count.