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Old Wed Aug 18, 2010, 11:55am
BSUmp16 BSUmp16 is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Walnut Creek, CA
Posts: 154
I agree with Tim C (who agrees with JM):

"The NTSB and the NBA did studies that document that the human mind cannot comprehend activites that occur within .03th of a second of each other."

The notion of a "tie" comes when the human brain (which, despite what some coaches will tell you includes the umpire's brain) cannot physiologically determine which event occured first and which came second.

While I agree that the statistics used in the report are all goofed up, the underlying data shows that on average there are 1.3 calls per game that are too close for the human brain to distinguish which event came first (runner at bag) and which came second (ball at bag). Of those 1.3 plays 14% are found to be too close for determination EVEN USING SLOW MOTION REPLAY. Those plays are what I (and I think most people) would call "ties". Based on the data, those plays will occur, on average, once every 6 games! That's a lot of "too close to call" plays over a season, so its not just theoretical.

There are no tie CALLS in baseball; there are tie PLAYS. Simply repeating the old "There are no ties in Baseball" does nothing to address the real issue.

And I am not being "creative, arbitrary, or subjective". I'm applying OBR Rule 6.05(j) (applicable to runners going into first base) which states: “A batter is out when - after a third strike or after he hits a fair ball, he or first base is tagged BEFORE he touches first base.” BY RULE, ties (i.e., those plays that the human brain cannot make a determination as to which event happened first) go to the runner.

You may disagree, but simply saying "BS" is not really a legitimate response.

P.S. My "Pause... Read... React." comment was meant metaphorically - a reference to the fact that MByron had not apparently "read" my comment before he "reacted" to it.
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