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Old Fri Jul 30, 2010, 04:47pm
UmpTTS43 UmpTTS43 is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Nebraska
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Quote:
Originally Posted by greymule View Post
Yes, my MLBUM says that first part, but it doesn't say, "A fielder leaving the field of play with possession is the same as deflecting it since it was his impetus that made the ball leave said field of play and become dead."
I did not quote MLBUM on that, hence no "'s around that statement. That is the interpretation I have been taught.

Quote:
mcrowder cited the MLBUM as instructing "treat as a caught ball," which is quite different.
Don't see that quote in the MLBUM.

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In the rule book, I can find only "falls into a bench or stand," "falls across ropes into a crowd," "should fall into a stand or among spectators or into the dugout or any other out-of-play area, [my emphasis]" and so on. It seems to me that falls is in all those examples for a reason. I don't see "enters DBT" or "leaves the field of play" anywhere (in OBR). Several case plays indicate that a fielder can indeed carry a ball into DBT and then make a throw.
Again DBT and leaving the field of play are two different situations. You can have DBT within the field of play. Once you leave the field of play, the ball is immediately dead.

Quote:
For what it's worth, I queried "Hal the Referee" of the Cleveland Plain Dealer 30 years ago about a fielder making a catch, leaping a fence, remaining on his feet, and making a throw from "Row F" of the stands. The answer was "Yes, that's legal."
No disrespect to "Hal the Referee", but he is wrong. 30 years ago he may have been right, but that is not the case in today's interpretations.
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