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OK, I know I've seen this discussion before, but can't search so here goes....
OBR 8.01 Pitcher shall take signs from the catcher while standing on the rubber. Is this a balk? I had it happen last night in Dixie Boys District trny and I chose to warn the pitcher. He had his foot behind the rubber and looked in for his signs, then moved his foot in front of the rubber and continued into set position. I was BU and PU says 'OK you can warn him, but that's a balk.' IMO, it depends on intent. There is no penalty associated with 8.01, so I defer to the note to Umpires on purpose of the balk rule. "Prevent pitcher from deliberately deceiving the base runner". If I had believed he was trying to simulate his stretch and set in order to draw the runner off and then throw to 1B without having to step, I would have called a balk.
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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Come on now
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If you have then that would be the first I've seen. We choose to ignore this since there is nothing gained, making application as in OBR etc., I don't have my books with me, but would like to see how FED has interpreted this. Thanks David |
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Here.... High School rules = OBR |
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Not particularly familiar with Dixie Boys rules, but I wondered the same thing. Yes, it is a balk in FED, but I'm reasonably certain that Dixie Boys does not play by FED.
Had the exact same thing in a game the other night that I was watching; I pulled out the rulebook and sure enough, there is no penalty. Of course, this guy took it on himself to be the "Balk Nazi," calling at least 12 balks over 2 games. He called everything he could think of. |
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When in doubt, bang 'em out! Ozzy |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by DG
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[Edited by DG on Jul 9th, 2004 at 01:43 PM] |
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What Rich Said
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That's a no brainer. Thanks David |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by ozzy6900
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In FED it is but it ain't. Before the rule made it into the OBR, to throw off (annoy) batters, the pitcher would take his signs from behind the rubber, step onto the rubber -- and take them again! Sometimes, when that happened, the batter stepped out of the box. So the pitcher stepped off the rubber, and the dance started again. The rule was designed to prevent such delays. Nowadays, the pitcher takes his sign from the coach, steps onto the pitcher, and pitches. My advice: If the pitcher does not delay (take them again from the catcher, for example) forget about it. But if he does delay, make him stop: Tell the catcher not to crouch until he's on the rubber. [Edited by Carl Childress on Jul 9th, 2004 at 02:55 PM] |
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The intent of the rule about taking signs off the rubber is to prevent a pitcher from doing so, quickly stepping on the rubber, coming set and throwing a pitch. Doing so does not allow any runners from being able to get their leads. It is NOT a balk. Rule book says to warn the pitcher, then if he continues to do so, eject him. I have yet to eject a pitcher for this, however I have called time and asked the pitcher to take his signals from the rubber and notified the coach of what was happening. 99/100 the pitcher just doesn't know what he's doing, but that one other time...
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