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Infield Fly
Bases loaded, one out.
Infield is shallow. Batter pops a ball into very shallow CF. CF lets it drop and turns two. Should infield fly have been called. I know that an outfielder can catch an infield fly, but doesn't an infielder still have to be in position to make the catch with reasonable effort. I've seen it argued that if the ball being allowed to drop is an advantage to the defense, then IF should be called. |
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I hope not, since if it can't be caught, it's not an infield fly.
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"I don't think I'm very happy. I always fall asleep to the sound of my own screams...and then I always get woken up to the sound of my own screams. Do you think I'm unhappy?" |
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Incorrect. The test of whether to call IFF is given right there in the rule: whether an infielder could catch the ball with ordinary effort. And it matters where they start: if the infield is in and the ball is in short CF, then it's unlikely that an infielder could catch it with ordinary effort.
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Cheers, mb |
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B) Okay, isn't that the point I made? |
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Like Michael says, the key is 'ordinary effort'. In no way, in the sitch presented, should this be an IFF. No infielder could have caught this shallow fly ball with ordinary effort.
I had a situation, IFF in effect, batter takes a full swing and hits a nubber in a soft arc, and it lands about 20 feet away between the pitcher's mound and first base line. The ball is untouched, and was no infielder would have been able to reach it even with herculean effort. No IFF was called, everyone was safe. Defensive coach was a bit perplexed, we talked about it at the time and he also came out to discuss it more between innings. He eventually accepted our ruling.
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Bob P. ----------------------- We are stewards of baseball. Our customers aren't schools or coaches or conferences. Our customer is the game itself. |
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Yes, which is why the IFF requires runners at first and second or with the bases loaded. . .as in the OP. I don't think anybody else was talking about doubling up the batter-runner in this sitch.
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And it is horrible base running and/or loafing for the trail runner and lead runner to both get caught on a fly ball to center with the infield in. Inexcusable, really.
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The runner that gets put out 2nd is the horrible loafer.
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Thanks, Dash ... I needed somebody to understand what I was imparting. It takes a blend of one or two runners with their heads up their @sses, and at least one who's loafing.
(And, have you worked a [SUNY] game that Tyler Johnson pitched yet?) |
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Not yet - hopefully next year. I did have Tropeano though. Someone did a good job of recruiting to land those two freshmen.
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Read the OP
"CF lets it drop". Intentional legal act - situation based. R1 or R2 is screwed no matter what. He reads potential catch. If he goes CF catches it and he's doubled off. If he stays CF lets it drop he's out at some base. BR is the loafer - he should be at first in either case.
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Rich Ives Different does not equate to wrong |
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