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NFHS RLV You Make the Call
OK, so here we go:
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For all the plays: The play at the plate stands, BR is out, other runners return to TOI.
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Robert
Read more carefully.
TC |
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Sit. 1: The runner from third is out on the force play at home; B4 is out for running lane interference. 8-4-1g is restricted only to the ball "being fielded or thrown to first base" (whatever "fielded to first base" would mean). I would leave runners at 2B and 3B on the play, unless my partner or I saw that the runners had NOT achieved their advance base at TOI. In short: what Bob said. Sit. 2: Runner is safe on the play at home; B4 is out for garden-variety running-lane interference. Sit. 3: The play at the plate stands. If the umpire rules that B4 interfered by being out of the running lane, B4 is out, the ball is dead immediately, and other runners return to their TOI bases. If the umpires didn't kill it immediately upon the interference, they should have, and in any case it's dead anyway. Send the runners back. In short: I don't see how reading more carefully would lead to a conclusion different from Bob's. |
I can't recall if FED adopts the "intervening play" philosophy. I am thinking they do not. If that is the case, when it is determined that the BR interfered with the play at first, the ball is immediately dead, BR is out, and runners return to positions at TOP. If R1 (assuming R3) is out, that out would stand.
If they do accept the "intervening play" philosophy, again immediate dead ball at time of INT, BR out, and runners placed at time of INT. |
OBR 6.05k uses the expression "fielded to first base," which is probably the basis for the idea that an "intervening play" negates running-lane interference.
FED 8-4-1g uses the expression "fielded or thrown to first base," which suggests that an intervening play would not relieve the BR of his obligation to run in the running lane. |
Bob/Mbyron
I apologize: I "misremembered" Bob's answer!
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In FED, the same is true except that INT can be called if the BR interfered with the throw or the act of fielding the throw. |
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In FED, runners always return TOI, with the exception of FPSR. |
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So does FED use the intervening play philosophy, or all all runners returned if R3 is safe?
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UmpTT,
I guess you could say FED uses the "intervening play" philosophy because in all three sitches in Tim's OP, the play at the plate "stands" and any remaining runners are returned to their TOI (rather than TOP) bases. But FED doesn't really need the "intervening play" concept because the "default" rule in FED is that on interference, runners return to their TOI base, not their TOP base. For example.... R1, no outs. R1 is stealing on the pitch and the batter hits a "swinging bunt" out in front of home plate. As the catcher fields the ball and begins to throw, the R1 has already reached 2B. The BR, running in fair territory the whole way, is hit by the catcher's throw and the ball dribbles into the 1B dugout on the ricochet. In OBR, the BR is out for the RL interference and the R1 returns to 1B. In FED, the BR is out for RL interference and the R1 gets to stay at 2B. No, really. And, if you think THAT'S strange, brand new for 2010, there's a FED interp that says you award a runner a base BEYOND that he legally occupied at TOI when his runner teammate interferes. JM |
Thanks JM
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Fed Ref please?
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Can you give me the reference for this interp you speak about in the last sentence? Thanks! |
[QUOTE=UmpJM (nee CoachJM);670022]UmpTT,
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Example: R1/R2 - hit an run. Ground ball to F6 who throws to F4 to start the 6-4-3 DP. When F4 receives the throw from F6, R2 is already on third at this point(it was a Hit/Run sitch), R1 slides illegally into second base. The call is 1. TIME 2. that's interference 3. R1 and B1 are out 4. R2 (now R3) is returned to second base. Therefore, even though R2 had reached 3rd base at TOI because it was a FPSR violation he returns to his TOP base. Pete Booth |
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