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You are correct BigUmp. The thing to remember is that this play is a delayed dead ball. I've seen a few umpires call this play dead immediately thus robbing the defence the opportunity to make the 2nd out. In your case the PU has the authority to call the 2nd out due to the fact that the batter was struck out and then interfered. this is in the delayed dead ball table for rule 5 in the FED rule book.
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OK, the batter is out unless you have the 2 out situation.
However, if it is not absolutely obvious the runner will be thrown out, would you send the runner back? Or if your not sure the runner could have been thrown out, rule on the side of the defense and call the runner out also? |
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NFHS 6-3-5 (penalty):
"If the pitch is a third strike and in the umpire's judgement interference prevents a possible double play (additional outs), two may be ruled out (8-4-2g). (emphasis mine) IOW, if you think that the batter's interference prevented a strike-em-out-throw-em-out outcome, you can call the runner out as well. |
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The batter is out no matter what. In this case, he is out because of the third strike, and in this instance the umpire can call the runner out also. Remember that the strike out came first followed by the interference.
If the batter had not struck out but interfered with F2, then the batter is out for the interference. Time would not be called unless the throw by F2 was unsuccessful in retiring the runner. If the throw was unsuccessful, then the runner would be returned to 1B. I hope that I'm making sense. ![]() |
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I think you're trying to generalize too much, and confusing the issue.
If the pitch was the 3rd strike, batter is out. Further, if BR interfered with a play (ie a possible double play), the runner is out as well. If the pitch was not the 3rd strike, and the batter interferes with the opportunity to make a play, SOMEONE is out. If less than 2 outs, the batter out and the runner returns. If 2 outs, the runner is out.
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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Mike: You said it backwards. When there are two outs it's the batter who is called out. If there are less than two outs the runner is out. Tim. |
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Dangit - that heavy Mexican lunch is putting me to sleep. Yes - I reversed it. My bad. Instead of editing, I'll own up to it and leave it out there.
The distinction is important in one way (and if I'd typed this, I would have realized the error in the above post). If there are 2 outs and a batter interferes, he is NOT the next batter in the next inning.
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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That's only when a runner on third is attempting to score. On any and all other plays by the catcher, the batter is called out and the runners are returned. With a runner attempting to score with less than two outs, the runner is out for interference, which is the more severe penalty. With two outs, the other penalty calling the batter out is enforced, and no run allowed. This is the more severe penalty with two outs since the batter doesn't get to finish his at-bat next inning. Steve
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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![]() Quote:
Ruling: Delayed dead ball. Batter is out. If the runner is not retired, the umpire can either send the runner back to 1st, or, call him out if, in the umpire's judgment, the catcher would have retired the runner had there been no interference. Play #2: R1. Count 0-2 on the batter. R1 attempts to steal as the batter strikes out. The batter interferes with the catcher's attempt to make a play. Ruling: Ball is immediately dead. The runner must be declared out since an offensive player (not a batter) interfered with fielder's attempt to make a play on that runner. Whether the catcher had a legitimate chance of retiring the runner is not an issue (as it was in Play #1). The fact that there was a play is sufficient reason to call the runner out for his teammate's interference. On interference, somebody must be out. In Play #2, since the batter is already (i.e strikeout) out, the only remaining choice is to call the runner out. David Emerling Memphis, Tn |
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The correct ruling would be- B1 out for interference, R1 back to first. |
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I was thinking of something else and I drifted. Thanks for the correction. Disregard my previous post Or, as Emily Litella (Gilda Radner) used to say, "Nevermind!" ![]() David Emerling Memphis, TN |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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