Quote:
Originally Posted by bob jenkins
Who told you that? I had two such questions on my test, and did NOT assume an appeal (there was a thrid such question, and that one did indicate an appeal, so the answer was easy).
|
I assumed an appeal, just because I thought they would want us to. That flies in the face of a proper interpretation of the question, though.
I'm curious to see what the correct answer will be on this one:
R2, R3, two outs. B1 smashes a drive into left field, and the ball bounces over the fence in fair territory. Both R2 and R3 are awarded home and B1 is awarded second. R3 touches the plate, then R2 touches the plate. The third-base coach yells for R2 to return and touch third since he had missed the bag on his way home. R2 retraces his steps by touching the plate, then going back to touch third; then, once again, coming back to touch home. When the umpire puts the ball into play, the third baseman calls for the ball and appeals that R2 had missed third on his first attempt. The umpire agrees and calls R2 out.
a.R2 is out and R3 scores.
b.R2 is out and R3's run is disallowed.
c.R3 and R2 both score. No out can be awarded since a legal appeal may not be made if the offensive team has drawn attention to any infraction by one of their runners.
d.No out is awarded. R3 and R2 score since R2 retraced his steps properly. This illustrates the "last time by" rule.
Even though R2's retouch is illegal, I'm betting 'd' will be listed as the proper response.