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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 09:53am
cc6 cc6 is offline
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Originally Posted by w_sohl View Post
So you conceed that some players, like the one in the video, would try to move away, as he did in the video, to avoid being caught?

I don't care what the players intentions were, my preventative officiating is ejecting the kid for malicious contact.
No the opposite. If a player does something aggressive he is going to stay there and hold his ground.
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 10:03am
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Originally Posted by cc6 View Post
No the opposite. If a player does something aggressive he is going to stay there and hold his ground.

I disagree. I know plenty of kids that would take an opportunity for a cheap shot and walk away in "victory." The intent was to get one good shot in, not to start a street fight - they got it, they were satisfied. It doesn't make the action any more or any less malilciaous just becasue they now walked away.

Now, in this play, F1 may not have intentionally tagged the runner in the face, but he did. That, combined with the force used to make the tag, makes it malicious.

For all we know that runner was dating the pitcher's sister and he broke up with her just before prom. Big brother wanted some payback for that.
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 01:43pm
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Originally Posted by ManInBlue View Post
Now, in this play, F1 may not have intentionally tagged the runner in the face, but he did. That, combined with the force used to make the tag, makes it malicious.
This logic is incorrect. Intent is a requirement of malice.
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  #4 (permalink)  
Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 03:39pm
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Originally Posted by Matt View Post
This logic is incorrect. Intent is a requirement of malice.
Not when you take into account all the safety rules written in FED. Webster's may define it with intent, but they didn't write the FED rule book.

With the new defensive malicious contact written into the rules, a hard tag could be considered malicious.

This tag was in the face, it didn't have to be, it COULD be malicious even without intent.
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  #5 (permalink)  
Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 08:53pm
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Originally Posted by ManInBlue View Post
With the new defensive malicious contact written into the rules, a hard tag could be considered malicious.
This tag was in the face, it didn't have to be, it COULD be malicious even without intent.
Mind citing the rule which justifies the notion that malicious contact doesn't require intent?
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  #6 (permalink)  
Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 09:50pm
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Originally Posted by Dave Reed View Post
Mind citing the rule which justifies the notion that malicious contact doesn't require intent?
Mind citing the rule which justifies the notion that malicious contact does require intent?
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  #7 (permalink)  
Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 10:45pm
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Originally Posted by ManInBlue View Post
Mind citing the rule which justifies the notion that malicious contact does require intent?
All right. First there is the necessity that the words and phrases of the rules (any rules, or the posts in this forum) have meaning, and that the meaning is available through either common usage, or by separate definition if some non-common meaning is intended. For example, "balk" has a common meaning, but in baseball rules it has a more specific, technical meaning, and the rules provide a definition.

"Malicious" has a common meaning, and no separately defined meaning, so, yes, intent is required.

Consider also Caseplay 8.3.3O, which seems to address directly the spurious notion that a hard tag to the face could be malicious without intent.

"8.3.3 SITUATION O: With R1 at third and R2 at first with one out, B3 hits a ground ball to F4. While attempting to tag R2 advancing to second, F4 applies intentional excessive force to R2’s head. On the play R1 is (a) advancing to the plate, or (b) R1 holds at third. RULING: In both (a) and (b), F4 is guilty of malicious contact......."

[my emphasis.]

Of course, the umpire is the judge of intent, so you can call this play any way you want.
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  #8 (permalink)  
Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 10:45pm
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Originally Posted by ManInBlue View Post
Mind citing the rule which justifies the notion that malicious contact does require intent?
Why don't wwe consider the meaing of the word "malicious"?

Malicious comes from "malice":

1 : desire to cause pain, injury, or distress to another
2 : intent to commit an unlawful act or cause harm without legal justification or excuse
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 10:07am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cc6 View Post
No the opposite. If a player does something aggressive he is going to stay there and hold his ground.
Not sure what utopian society you live in, but if I jab someone, I'm not sticking around to get caught.
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 11:33am
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Originally Posted by cc6 View Post
No the opposite. If a player does something aggressive he is going to stay there and hold his ground.
Runner crashes into and takes out the catcher with a forearm. He gets up and goes to his dugout.

So, this is not an aggressive act because he doesn't hang out to admire his work?

BullSh!t.
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  #11 (permalink)  
Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 08:10pm
cc6 cc6 is offline
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Originally Posted by MrUmpire View Post
Runner crashes into and takes out the catcher with a forearm. He gets up and goes to his dugout.

So, this is not an aggressive act because he doesn't hang out to admire his work?

BullSh!t.
Easy there big guy. How many pitchers say "sorry" after intentionally hitting a batter to avoid getting ejected? Not many. Most players are going to stand by what they do. I think if that player had meant to hit the runner, he would have jogged backwards expecting retaliation on the part of the player. I only watched the clip once, but from what I remember he turned around, thus leaving himself open to attack. He wouldn't have turned his back if he thought there would be any sort of any attack back at him.
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 12:33pm
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Originally Posted by cc6 View Post
No the opposite. If a player does something aggressive he is going to stay there and hold his ground.
Why does that even matter? Why would you even care about the reaction? If you make an aggressive action, a non-aggressive reaction does not cancel it out.

By what you are posting, if he was to punch the kid directly in the eye (obviously aggressive) and then walk away, it seems that you think that makes it not an aggressive move. Sure, you'll say that's not what you mean because it probably isn't, but you have posted that same view several times, and it is not something you can be consistent with.
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 08:14pm
cc6 cc6 is offline
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Originally Posted by briancurtin View Post
Why does that even matter? Why would you even care about the reaction? If you make an aggressive action, a non-aggressive reaction does not cancel it out.

By what you are posting, if he was to punch the kid directly in the eye (obviously aggressive) and then walk away, it seems that you think that makes it not an aggressive move. Sure, you'll say that's not what you mean because it probably isn't, but you have posted that same view several times, and it is not something you can be consistent with.
I wouldn't decide whether or not to eject the fielder after waiting for him to walk away. The act of walking away is evidence that he didn't push the guy with malicious intent. It was clumsiness, and probably inexperience on tag plays. Another factor I remember is that he didn't look at the guy when he tagged him. All around not malicious, and I'm not ejecting for it.
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 08:41pm
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Originally Posted by cc6 View Post
I wouldn't decide whether or not to eject the fielder after waiting for him to walk away. The act of walking away is evidence that he didn't push the guy with malicious intent. It was clumsiness, and probably inexperience on tag plays. Another factor I remember is that he didn't look at the guy when he tagged him. All around not malicious, and I'm not ejecting for it.
Rubbish. You are basing your entire argument on a fallacy. People committing aggressive acts do not always hang around to admire their work. Many people who act aggressively are, in fact, cowards and move away quickly.

Indeed, most of those who stay after an agressive act are those who acted accidentally or clusmsily. These people tend to stay to indicate their lack of intent or remorse, or both.

Back to the classroom.
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Old Sun Apr 26, 2009, 08:59pm
cc6 cc6 is offline
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Originally Posted by MrUmpire View Post
Rubbish. You are basing your entire argument on a fallacy. People committing aggressive acts do not always hang around to admire their work. Many people who act aggressively are, in fact, cowards and move away quickly.

Indeed, most of those who stay after an agressive act are those who acted accidentally or clusmsily. These people tend to stay to indicate their lack of intent or remorse, or both.

Back to the classroom.
Gee thanks for always adding an insult.

Last edited by cc6; Sun Apr 26, 2009 at 09:06pm.
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