|
|||
Quote:
FWIW. I'd rather be a troll or phony as I deem it several rungs above hypocrite. It's a rather boring read when most of the posts are of the cyberbulling, guttersniping variety. Placing blame at the feet of one person only encourages the privileged few to feel a sense of immunity. I don't visit here very often since I'm now the primary caretaker for my elderly parents. I also recently donated a kidney to my younger sister so she can hopefully add a few more quality years to her life. Ad hominemly speaking, just your average day in the life of a phony troll.
__________________
I have nipples, Greg. Can you milk me? |
|
|||
"I can't really see what "scrambling back to a (forced) bag has to do with it."
"B is the correct answer as R1 acquired 2B when he slid past it, therefore removing the force at 2B. It can't be an appeal for a missed base as the base was not tagged; F6 tagged R1 not the base. Since R1 acquired 2B and R3 scored before the third out was made, the run counts. " It is called continuous action by J/R. Most umpires understand this situation very well. |
|
|||
Quote:
Although many umpires embrace the concept of unrelaxed action, from what I understand at least one of the pro schools does not. They teach that a runner can be appealed for a missed base even when he's scrambling back to it, using the strict language of 7.10(b) as justification. I was merely trying to explain to the obtuse "Larry" what the difference was between appealing a runner scrambling back to a base and appealing a runner with a "clean miss" advancing to the next base. I agree that J/R had already explained that. For my part, I like the idea of unrelaxed action: IMO, a missed base appeal should occur after playing action has ended, not when a runner is 4 feet away and scrambling to get to the "missed" base. I admit that the rules provide scant support for this opinion: it just seems to me to be better baseball. In actual play, I probably just wouldn't "hear" an appeal during unrelaxed action.
__________________
Cheers, mb |
|
|||
Quote:
(And, to Larry -- this has all been discussed many times before with some taking one side and some the other and no, to my knowledge "official" ruling. J/R, and all other "authoritative opinion" has been wrong before.) |
|
|||
Quote:
In Larry1953's scenario, 2B was not tagged by a fielder and the ball. Last edited by nopachunts; Mon Jun 27, 2011 at 08:37am. |
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
To remain obtuse, the play was on a forced runner. The rules say such runner can be put out if either he or the base he was forced to is tagged before he touches said base and no run can score if such force out is the third out.
Many times you see F3 snag a liner while diving toward 1B while R1 is off the bag simply with his lead. 1B then crawls over a foot or two to tag the bag. Technically this is an appeal play and 1B hardly has the time to make a verbal appeal. As part of continuous action with BU being aware of the circumstances, the runner is always called out if he does not make it back in time. It seems to be a similar situation with the OP where the runner is scrambling to get back to 2B and the BU knows he missed the bag. |
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Quote:
IMO, it's not any feature of the tag of R1 that matters, but the nature of the appeal. I have a problem with granting an appeal during a runner's effort to correct his baserunning error. I'm ambivalent about this issue, and glad it rarely arises. I've already noted that J/R world is pure interpretation here, and I respect umpires who insist on a stricter interpretation of the letter of 7.10(b). I just think J/R is more in the spirit of the game than such an interpretation. Here's a bigger problem case for me: tie game, bottom of the last inning, bases loaded, 2 outs. Batter grounds to F6, who flips to F4 for the third out. F4 bobbles the ball as R1 slides past 2B without touching it. After R3 crosses the plate, F4 gathers the ball and tags R1 off the base for the third out. Do we allow an advantageous 4th out appeal in this case? If so, we go to extra innings; if not the game is over!
__________________
Cheers, mb |
|
|||
Quote:
In FED, all the defense has to say is R1 missed 2B. Play the next inning. In OBR, a proper appeal has to be made. Depending if the appeal is made properly or not, we may be going home or playing the next inning. |
|
|||
What if in both cases, that instead of tagging the runner, F6 tags the base while shouting "that's still a force!"? Hard to see how he could suppress the ingrained urge to tag the runner off the bag, but it would seem a proper way to negate the run.
|
Bookmarks |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
correctable errors | shont | Basketball | 10 | Sat Oct 30, 2004 10:28pm |
Timekeeping Errors | Stat-Man | Basketball | 11 | Tue Sep 28, 2004 03:58pm |
errors on an at bat... | damion2275 | Baseball | 3 | Tue Jul 08, 2003 01:05pm |
Are these errors? | jayedgarwho | Basketball | 8 | Mon Feb 24, 2003 11:57am |
Correctable Errors | Just Curious | Basketball | 1 | Thu Dec 16, 1999 11:07am |