Quote:
Originally Posted by greymule
If the batter had an 0-2 count would you allow an advance on a D3K where the ball gets away?
The way I understand it:
Yes, if the runner clearly advanced on the pitch that got away, say, to the screen or into DBT. No, if the ball stayed close to F2 and the runner advanced on the play to 1B to get the BR.
"The umpire must determine . . ."
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greymule,
The problem I have with that is, what if, instead of the R3 advancing and scoring on the WP, he were thrown out at the plate. The defense appeals the BOOT.
In OBR and NCAA, the out at home is nullified and the runner is put back on 3B. (In FED only, that out would stand even with the BOOT appeal).
So, if we allow the advance but nullify the out, we allow the offense to benefit from doing something illegal, but do not allow the defense to benefit when the offense did something illegal.
That doesn't make "baseball sense".
You will also notice that in ALL of the OBR case plays (Rule Book, MLBUM, JEA, J/R, BRD) which have a runner's advance "stand" following a BOOT appeal, the advance ALWAYS occurs before the batter completes his at bat. While that doesn't PROVE anything, it is supportive of the notion that the rule means exactly what it says. That advances (or outs) that occur
during the improper at bat stand, while those that occur on the pitch/play that completed the improper at bat are nullified.
Now I happen to know that Chris's NCAA source is "unimpeachable" - but I still believe he's wrong.
JM