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1) If the pitcher is pitching from the set with nobody on and does not come to a complete stop and delivers the pitch, is this a ball? (OBR)
2) Pitcher is taking his signs on the rubber with runners on and is spinning the ball in his hand about hip-high. The ball drops from his hand but the pitcher catches it at about mid-thigh. Is this still considered a drop and a balk, or does the ball have to hit the ground for it to be considered a drop? 3) (Runners on base) Pitcher engages the rubber with the ball in his glove. He then flips the ball directly from his glove to his bare hand. His bare hand never reaches into the glove to get the ball. Is this a balk? Thanks |
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[Edited by briancurtin on Aug 2nd, 2005 at 12:56 AM] |
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I think it's a ball with no runners and a balk with runners if I'm reading the BRD correctly. Anyhow, the stop does apply with no runners in FED.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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You can have an illegal pitch, which is a balk with runners on base, and a ball with no runners on. That's the situation here. |
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And,
I agree with what LDUB is saying.
In the Newsletter (I think 1995) when Brad identifys this actions as illegal he calls it a "Balk" . . . It has been pointed out everytime that even in FED you cannot balk with no runners on but Brad Rumble never corrected his original comment. I think it is safe to say it actually is an illegal pitch, with penalty, which is the key issue of difference with OBR. Words are not really important. We know that the "non-pause" and the start stop windup, with no runners on, is still an infraction ain FEDlandia. T |
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If there is no penalty in OBR for not coming set with no runners on, what about if the pitcher double sets, ie. he comes set, and then moves and comes set again?
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Well I am certainly wiser than this man. It is only too likely that neither of us has any knowledge to boast of; but he thinks that he knows something which he does not know, whereas I am quite conscious of my ignorance. At any rate it seems that I am wiser than he is to this small extent, that I do not think that I know what I do not know. ~Socrates |
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