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By definition, a fly ball is one that is hit high in the air. That's your first judgment for calling the IFF.
So, was the soft liner hit high in the air? Yes/no? There's your answer. What a slow pitch softball umpire might answer is anyone's guess. |
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I have umpired many softball games (ASA, FED, NCAA). There would be no IFF on the soft liner described in the OP. All softball codes also prohibit intentional dropping of the ball (though a fielder can allow a ball to drop untouched).
However, unlike in OBR, in ASA a fielder can deliberately guide the ball to the ground, as with a closed glove or his body. So F6 could knock the soft liner down and try for a double play. I haven't seen a fielder try that in actual play, however.
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Quote:
________ LuxuryLips live Last edited by youngump; Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 07:33pm. |
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Slightly off topic. The shortstop on my men's softball team tries this trick all the time. That is dropping the ball on a line shot hit to him with runners on. Occasionally he gets away with it and bags two. Most slo-pitch softball umpires are poorly trained. Not all but most IMO.
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