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I heard that at least 5 times last year..."that happend in the game last night and the announcers said..."
It's crazy how the announcers become the authority to the regular public. Scary.
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It's like Deja Vu all over again |
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Matthew 15:14, 1 Corinthians 1:23-25 |
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Rita |
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OK all you young-uns. There WAS a time when they had to stop for one second
From JEA: It was not until 1950 that the rules committee introduced the complete stop rule. That first official rule required the pitcher to stop for one full second. In 1964, the rule was amended by dropping the one full second requirement. The new wording merely stated that the pitcher had to come to a stop. McCarver played 1959-1980 so he was there when the rule changed and should know better, but don't just blow off the one-second stop as pure BS. The belief has a basis in an actual rule - albeit an obsolete one.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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On SportsCenter the other morning, they were showing highlights from the Series. A Phillie pitcher attempted to bunt, but took it off of the fingers. You guessed it ! The female anchor (McKendry ?) said, "No, he doesn't get first base, the hands are part of the bat.......
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All generalizations are bad. - R.H. Grenier |
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I believe I read somewhere long ago that a "change of direction" was considered a stop at one time. It seems like it was from a series of articles written by Nick Bremingan (who was the rules instructor at the Bill Kinnamon umpire school) for "Referee" magazine.
By the laws of physics, when there was a change of direction, there had to have been a stop, and therefor a change of direction technically met the definition of a stop for OBR. I do not know if that is the same ruling now. You would need some of the veteran umpires to bring us up to speed from that old interpretation to whatever the interpretation is now. Veterans chime in. |
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One of my favorites I heard this year in a men's league. The batter hit the ball which went strait down to the plate and then landed < 1' infront of the plate. The batter made no attempt to run, and the catcher just reached forward grabbed the ball, tagged the batter and I called him out. "What are you talking about the ball is foul when it hits the plate! I've been playing all my life including Independent League and I've never heard of that...." The next batter was the teams coach who told him I was right and asaved him from having some extra time to look it up. |
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