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Pirates vs Cards - 2 missed calls on same play
Tempers rise after disputed call in sixth inning | pirates.com: News
5.09 The ball becomes dead and runners advance one base, or return to their bases, without liability to be put out, when— (a) A pitched ball touches a batter, or his clothing, while in his legal batting position; runners, if forced, advance; 6.05 A batter is out when— (f) He attempts to hit a third strike and the ball touches him; |
I see one missed call on the play -- what was the second?
And, I've often postulated that the ball off the back foot was hard to see -- you get blocked out. But, I'm surprised one of the BUs didn't have it. |
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I thought by looking at the replay that the HP umpire acnowledged the ball hit him but i guess he didn't. |
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OTOH, someone should have noticed when the batter raised his foot after getting plunked. :p |
In the old days they would have looked for shoe polish on the ball.
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The angle the ball took after hitting his foot and his lifting of his foot after being hit should have been enough evidence to call him out. Easy to call from my kitchen table. Not so much on the field.
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What signal was HP making with his right hand immediately after the pitch?
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I thought the approved mechanic for an uncaught third strike was to first signal the strike, then give a safe signal while verbalizing No Catch. But I could be wrong. Perhaps this is the new and improved way of doing it? |
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I moved this year to pointing the strike and keeping the right arm out for a few extra seconds until it's become clear that the strike wasn't caught, we're live, the runner can go, etc. |
Out of sheer lazy reflexiveness, I started pointing to the ground after my hammer. Seems to do the trick.
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MLB.com Gameday | MLB.com: Gameday Click on "Quintana's Seven Strikeouts" video on the right. |
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