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A-Rod Fake Tag=OBS??
Did anyone catch the Yank-Oriole game (on Thursday, I believe) where Birds' R2 tries to steal 3B and Posada throws the ball into the outfield?
F5 A-Rod put a major fake tag on the runner, his arm movements greatly, IMHO, impeding the sliding R2 from getting up and heading toward home. Ball is in the outfield by this time. No big whup, R2 recovered and scored easily on error. But no signal whatsoever from U3. Anyone else glimpse this? I had an obvious type B OBS (and another bush-league ploy) on Rodski. Ace |
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Saw a similar play recently in another MLB game (sorry I can't identify it precisely; the games roll one into another for me). Somebody was stealing 2B, the throw went into the outfield, and F6 tagged the sliding runner and held the tag on as he got up. The runner was not fooled.
As everyone has said, this is not uncommon in pro ball. It's just part of the game. |
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b. Surprised everyone has missed this. The "deke" isn't the issue, if Arods presence over the bag physically impedes R2s ability to pop up and advance then we should have OBS. |
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Originally Posted by Don Mueller
Did not see the play, but by your decription could very easily have been type b. Surprised everyone has missed this. The "deke" isn't the issue, if Arods presence over the bag physically impedes R2s ability to pop up and advance then we should have OBS. Quote:
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Are you saying, as described, that Arod has the right to impede the runners ability to pop up and move forward or are you saying that because of Arods star power you would be afraid of making the call? |
Unless I'm missing something, I do not see anything against this in OBR.
Personally, I think it's a bit dirty, and just FYI, it's a major no-no in softball (ISF fastpitch). Shmuel |
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Is this not classic OBS? |
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From what I'm reading about obstruction here, I think my understanding needs some "tweeking".
I had a similar play the other night where a runner was caught in a rundown between home and third. The runner was diving back to third when the third baseman "tagged" the runner without the ball. I called obstruction (and awarded home) because the third baseman physically touched the runner BEFORE the runner obtained third base. It was actually quite strange because I was watching the play and saw the tag of the runner about 4 feet from third. I hesitated and thought, "OK the tag was made BEFORE the runner got to third so the runner is out. WAIT a second, I didn't see the ball thrown from the catcher to the third baseman. Where's the ball???" (I turn to look at catcher who clearly still has the ball in his throwing hand) Point and yell, "TIME. THAT'S OBSTRUCTION. YOU HOME." Had a major blowup with third baseman resulting in ejection as that was the winning run of the game. The fielder said that he didn't contact the runner with any part of his body only the glove. I was under the impression that ANY physical contact on a runner without the ball was automatic obstruction. Granted we play with OBR which allows some contact if a thrown ball is "impending", but in this situation the ball wasn't thrown. Did I make the right call?? |
1. How did this fake tag actually hinder the runner returning to third? If not, why is it OBS at all?
2. Even if this is OBS, why award home? Under OBR, you'd protect the runner back to third if that's where he's diving at the time of OBS. |
Michael,
Agree that it's only Obstruction if the runner is actually obstructed. However, under OBR IF a runner is obstructed while in a rundown (taking tibear at his word), it is ALWAYS considered Type A and the runner is awarded an advance base, even if obstructed while returning to his previous base. JM |
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