Quote:
Originally Posted by David Emerling
When you say "the time of the infraction", in this case, that would be the time of the appeal?
What "infraction" are you referring to?
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I always believed the "time of the infraction" was simply the moment that the runner failed to do what he was supposed to do.
R1, R3, one out. Suicide squeeze. Batter bunts the ball in front of home plate. F2 fields the ball, tags the BR, then throws to second to play on R1, and the ball goes into center field. R1 misses second on his way to third. An appeal is made that the runner missed second. At the "time of the infraction", the BR was already out, so his miss of second was not a force. R3's run scores.
R1, R3, one out. Suicide squeeze. Batter bunts the ball in front of home plate. F2 fields the ball, and throws to first base. The ball goes past F3, but F9 is backing up the throw, and he throws out the BR at second. R1 goes all the way to third on the play, missing second. An appeal is made that the runner missed second. At the "time of the infraction", the BR was still viable, so R1 was still forced when he missed the bag. R3's run does not score.
Or am I wrong here? Now I'm beginning to doubt myself...