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Old Wed May 05, 2010, 01:12pm
MrUmpire MrUmpire is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: NY state
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rich Ives View Post
You said:

or where the umpire believes he would have reached absent the obstruction.

and the use of "or" means you pick one of the options and ignore the other - thus you could throw out the "minimum one base" part and pick the "base he would have reached" part

so on a pickoff attempt at first, given those words, one could think you award first.
Wow.

Sorry coach. I'll be much more careful of my sentence construction in the future. I shan't confuse you again.
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