Tue May 20, 2014, 05:56pm
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Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: USA
Posts: 14,565
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dakota
OK, this back and forth with 2 different scenarios is making following this tedious. Here is what fdt92 is trying to say (I think) in the modified scenario (no pitch thrown to B4).
B1, B3, B2, B4 and the defense appeals BOO when B4 steps into the box and no pitch has been thrown. B1,3, and 2 are on base.
B3 batted improperly for B2, but the defense did not appeal. Once a pitch was thrown to B2, B3's at-bat becomes legal and the batting order resumes from there.
This makes B4 the proper batter, with B2 batting improperly for B4. B2 gets on base.
The defense appeals B2 out of order before a pitch is thrown to B4. B4 (as the proper batter that B2 batted for) is declared out for failure to bat in turn, and B2's at-bat is negated, with B2 being removed from the bases and B1 and B3 returned to their bases at the time of the last pitch to B2.
B5 is now the batter due up.
That's what fdt92 is trying to say.
OK, explain how this is wrong. I don't think it is.
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Fixed that presumption for you. fdt92 CLEARLY stated "B4 takes a pitch before the defense notices."
That's the end of it right there. There is no "what if" available that is going to change anything involving the previous 3 batters no matter how hard someone is trying.
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball.
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