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Between Innings The Rat Said...
"You guys don't know the rules! You missed that one....the batter's out!" After being encouraged to go home and spend some time reading the rules, he said, "I don't need to read the rules...I have coached for 10 years in New York."
At that point, I smiled and said, "there's your problem." Situation: OBR, R1, 2 outs, dropped third strike. In the previous inning he had complained about an infield fly not being called with R1 only. Now tell me guys, is that really how it works it New York? :confused: |
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I can't say for sure how it works in New York, but here in the armpit of the Midwest he would have been on his way to the Lazy Boy and Budweiser for the rest of the game. He certainly isn't going to stay after making those comments! Tim. |
I don't know. Let's ask the expert.....
Rich Ives, where are you? |
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NY is pretty big and diverse. Any resemblance between NY City and where I live is strictly coincidental. Even within NYC, any resemblance between the South Bronx and Staten Island is coincidental. NY is bigger than one usually thinks. It's over 500 miles from Montauk to Buffalo (using the shortcut through NJ&PA) and 400 miles from NYC to the Canadian border north of Plattsburgh. |
Last I checked an infield fly can only be called with runners on first and second or bases loaded and less than two outs (and I ump in NY). Although occassionally the coaches try for a variation or two.
Ed H |
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Hey out here in California , last night I had a coach ask for the infield fly on a pop up in front of the dug out , clearly in foul territory. He had the situation right (Runners 1 & 2 with less than two outs) but the location wrong. I just shook my head and said "your just testing me, right coach?"
Steve Sunny CA |
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JM |
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Guys, the coach was right. It was an "infield fly", just not an out!!! Maybe we should be yelling.. "infield fly batter is not out until caught"???
Last season I had a coach ask me to get help from my partner after I called a strike on a check swing. And believe it or not, a coach actually tried to tell me that the hands were part of the bat... Can you believe it?? Bob P. |
This is why we signal each other that IFF is in effect. I've made the occasional mistake of signaling IFF is on when it wasn't. Partner's quick swipe of the arm (IFF is off signal) told me I was in outer space, and prevented the possibility of the sitch above.
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Mcrowder, poor Steve was working alone, by his lonesome. That happened a lot this season, with all our rain-out makeup games here in sunny California.
While working solo, signals are superflous. I have asked for help from my "partner" on occasion, just for giggles. Bob P. |
You do that too? I do it on check swings when they from reflex say "ask for help." I say to Harvey the Rabbitt, "did he go?......."no, he didn't go!"
I work with Harvey on all but tournament games, when we go to 2-man. |
Steve,
The real fun is when I work a 4 man all by myself. "They're coming to take me away....haha...hehe"... Bob (Straightjacket Blue) P |
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Varsity game a couple years back, we are getting continuous static from the visitors dugout. V'sB1 takes a mighty cut and cracks his knuckles on the ball; takes off running. I'm yelling TIME!, DEAD BALL! IT HIT HIM at the top of my lungs; and here comes the visitor's head rat: "Hands are part of the bat, Blue!" "You're kidding me, right, coach?" "NO- THE HANDS ARE PART OF THE BAT!" "Not this bat [holding up Exhibit A]. Count is 2-2." |
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