|
|||
OBR
R2, R3, 1 out. Ground ball to F6, R2 runs OVER F6 going to third. F6 recovers and throws to 1st base for an out on the BR. R3 scores before BR is thrown out at first. What is the ruling?
__________________
Alan Roper Stand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here - CPT John Parker, April 19, 1775, Lexington, Mass |
|
|||
Quote:
Umpire discretion in OBR on wether the interference was accidental or deliberate is necessary, with a resultant one or two outs. However, from your description, I would have called interference, dead ball, and eith B1 or R3 out. Innning Over. |
|
|||
Originally posted by jumpmaster
R2, R3, 1 out. Ground ball to F6, R2 runs OVER F6 going to third. F6 recovers and throws to 1st base for an out on the BR. R3 scores before BR is thrown out at first. What is the ruling? One of our most Important jobs as Blues is to KNOW when the ball is either Delayed Dead (wait until playing action is over before enforcing) or IMMEDIATELY Dead (Enforce right away). Unfortunately the OBR rule-book does not have a nice neat table to reference. One has to make their own list. The FED rule-book has a Table of when the Ball is Immediate vs. delayed dead. 99% of the Interference calls the Ball is IMMEDIATELY Dead. Here's the Call in your play. As soon as you judge interference the call is 1. TIME 2. That's Interference 3. Somebody is out namely R2 In OBR if you felt that R2 ran into F6 Willfully and Deliberately to prevent a DP you could call 2 outs (This would be a rarity in an OBR Game) In FED, the terminology Willfully / Deliberately is absent, so if you judged that F6 could have tagged R2 and threw to F3 to get B1, record 2 on this play. Normally with R2/R3 is not a DP situation, so under both sets of rules, the call would most likely be 2 outs, R3 (if he/she scored) back to third, R2 is out on the interference and B1 to first. Pete Booth
__________________
Peter M. Booth |
|
|||
My call was this...
Signal delayed dead ball. observe throw to first, BR out. Call dead ball, call R2 out for interference. Run that scored counts because the 3rd out was after the run scored. I think that an arguement could be made that there was no interference b/c F6 was successful in putting out BR. Peter - why dead ball immediately?
__________________
Alan Roper Stand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here - CPT John Parker, April 19, 1775, Lexington, Mass |
|
|||
Originally posted by jumpmaster
My call was this... Signal delayed dead ball. observe throw to first, BR out. Call dead ball, call R2 out for interference. Run that scored counts because the 3rd out was after the run scored. I think that an arguement could be made that there was no interference b/c F6 was successful in putting out BR. Peter - why dead ball immediately? The ball is dead immediately because it's the rule. At the end of OBR 7.09 PENALTY FOR INTERFERENCE: The runner is out and the ball is DEAD. As mentioned you need to know when the ball is delayed dead vs. immediate Dead. Interference is almost always an immediate dead ball. When interference occurs we do not wait to see what happens (Exception B1 interferes with F2, but F2 makes the play anyway), We call TIME, That's Interference, and Somebody is Out. Pete Booth
__________________
Peter M. Booth |
|
|||
Interference
Quote:
Interference is not a delayed dead ball call, as other posts have replied.....Interference is immediate dead ball, somebody is out and any runners on base return to the last base they legally occupied at the time of the pitch. Michael |
|
|||
Well,
I guess I kicked this one harder than I thought. So the proper ruling would be... time - R2 out. R3 return to 3rd. BR back in the box. Would the pitch count as a strike?
__________________
Alan Roper Stand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here - CPT John Parker, April 19, 1775, Lexington, Mass |
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Quote:
|
Bookmarks |
|
|