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Looking for a fight?
Quote:
My point is quite plain. You quoted it. -- Inspection doesn't buy you much - it does not ensure legal equipment will be used because you don't have control over that equipment. Therefore, inspection does not directly ensure player safety. My second point may have been less salient. By rule, the inspection criteria are not specified beyond requiring a sticker/silkscreen. I've seen on the internet proprieters that will silkscreen any bat. Got an illegal bat? Send it to them and get it silkscreened. Now the umpire will say "That's a legal bat! And you can use it." Safety of players not ensured. The level of inspection is not specified but as an umpire on the field of play, I can do little more than find that a bat has a sticker. Hence, I tried to say that I feel, entering a team's dugout and making an official inspection is a futile exercise if you are trying to ensure player safety. Personally, I feel a formal inspection is over-officious and does not ensure player safety. That's enough said on my part.
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"There are no superstar calls. We don't root for certain teams. We don't cheat. But sometimes we just miss calls." - Joe Crawford |
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