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About 10 yrs. ago or so, the Umpires were instructed to call balks in line with the rules, not the way things were. During that time, there were more balks called in 1/2 of the season compared to all of the preceding year. After the All Star break things went back to "normal" which tells me that the Players Union got involved. In a nutshell, baseball can change any of it's rules but ultimately, the Players Union will have the final say. You really think that an umpire in the World Series will call Derek Jeter out on strike three if he fails to show up in the batter's box in accordance with the rules. Pete Booth
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Peter M. Booth |
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I don't believe the players union will get in a quandary over this rule or interpretation. The root problem is that batters are all to often stepping out of the box after a pitch and adjusting their batting gloves a few too many times (Nomar Garciapara), or some other gyration of adjusting someting.
If the pitchers got the ball, and their ready to toe the rubber, the batter had better get in the box or risk getting a strike called and possible being declared out if it's the third one. I have called this once in a Fed HS Game under the Fed rules. It created a fuss for a moment, but then the game proceeded, and all subseqent batters got in the box appropriately. |
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The mechanic is stated above is was taught at Evans in Oct (AZ Classic). |
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this is a good rule change...if I remember correctly, a batter still couldn't, by rule, jump in and hit the pitch...but it wasn't a dead ball sitch...this is a nice, umpire friendly, rule change.
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It's like Deja Vu all over again |
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