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NAIA 6.10-3 and 4 - The starting pitcher can be the DH (pitcher on defense, DH on offense) if the designation is noted on the lineup card prior to the game. The starting pitcher is the only pitcher in the game that that can assume such double role. Such player is allowed to remain as DH when replaced as pitcher, but may no longer play a defensive position.
NCAA 7-2B - If no DH is listed, the pitcher is automatically considered the DH on offense and the pitcher on defense. So, how this works is if they start with a 9 man lineup, the pitcher can stay in the game as a hitter (DH) when he is replaced as the pitcher. The new pitcher does not bat. If you start with 10 man lineup this does not work because in this case the pitcher is not serving a dual role. |
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Papa C wrote a very entertaining article a few years ago on this subject: http://childress.officiating.com/?d=...+-+and+Why.pdf |
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As far as your questions - still depends on when the changes are made. In general, once a player leaves the batting order they can never go back. It's making sense of what is and what is not a double switch that causes heartburn. The good news is that few coaches know the rule either, so they don'y push the envelope. The smart ones - go check before you say no. Read the article & chuckle. Then read it again (5 or 10 times) & learn. |
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OK, in Papa C's article, look at #2 of the 7 principles of the DH.
#2 The pitcher plays defense. Play 2: The pitcher replaces F3. Ruling. No more DH. the pitcher hits in the spot vacated by the DH. the old pitcher bats in F3's spot. So in my situation, that would have been a legal substitution, I just had the old pitcher batting in the incorrect slot. I had old pitcher batting in the DH spot and the new pitcher batting in the slot of the replaced defensive player. That should be flip flopped. New pitcher bats in the DH slot and the old batting in my case the CF spot. That's the NCAA interp. Would this apply to OBR as well?
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This is the official ruling I was given.
The pitcher may play a defensive position. Once he does this, the DH shall be terminated for the remainder of the game. The starting pitcher must bat in the slot vacated by the defensive player he is replacing on defense. The new pitcher would then bat in the slot vacated by the DH. In NAIA rules, the pitcher does not have to be listed as the P/DH on the lineup card. And this does not prevent him from playing defense in a different position.
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"You are only one call away from controversy" |
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