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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 09:02am
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contradicting or not

Rule 2 -5-art 1 –b
A fair ball is a batted ball which: b, contacts fair ground on or beyond an imaginary line between first and third base

Rule 2-16-art 1 a
A foul ball is a batted ball: a which settles on foul territory between home and first base or between home and third base..
This brings up a situation that could happen especially with the new turf fields.

Batter hits a ball with back spin which first hits beyond this imaginary line between first and third, spins back and settles in foul territory. By rule you could call it both ways or am I missing something here.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 09:49am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
Rule 2 -5-art 1 –b
A fair ball is a batted ball which: b, contacts fair ground on or beyond an imaginary line between first and third base

Rule 2-16-art 1 a
A foul ball is a batted ball: a which settles on foul territory between home and first base or between home and third base..
This brings up a situation that could happen especially with the new turf fields.

Batter hits a ball with back spin which first hits beyond this imaginary line between first and third, spins back and settles in foul territory. By rule you could call it both ways or am I missing something here.

Fair ball. Not contradicting.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:00am
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Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
Rule 2 -5-art 1 –b
A fair ball is a batted ball which: b, contacts fair ground on or beyond an imaginary line between first and third base

Rule 2-16-art 1 a
A foul ball is a batted ball: a which settles on foul territory between home and first base or between home and third base..
This brings up a situation that could happen especially with the new turf fields.

Batter hits a ball with back spin which first hits beyond this imaginary line between first and third, spins back and settles in foul territory. By rule you could call it both ways or am I missing something here.
It became fair when it hit fair and met the requirement. You can't un-fair it after that.

What if a fly ball to the outfield hits fair and then rolls into foul ground. Is that now foul? Of course not. Same here.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:03am
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Originally Posted by Rich Ives View Post
It became fair when it hit fair and met the requirement. You can't un-fair it after that.

What if a fly ball to the outfield hits fair and then rolls into foul ground. Is that now foul? Of course not. Same here.
Completely different scenario,

Ball could hit at 90fett 1 inch right by either bag, spin backwards and go foul in front of bag. is why I am asking.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:09am
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Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
Completely different scenario...
Not exactly the same, but not completely different, either.

The key to both calls is where the ball FIRST lands.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:18am
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I understand that. But a broad statement. ball could hit fair/foul before the imaginary line and then go the other way. so in reality your statement is not quite true.

Just something I have thought about after seeing some weird stuff on turf fields. The odds in most cases is the defense will make a play on the ball before it has a chance to go foul. Considering how far the ball has to go to cross this imaginary line. They would not want to run the risk of the runner beating the play.

One thing I like about turf fields is the extra outs you get from players over sliding the base.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:23am
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Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
I understand that. But a broad statement. ball could hit fair/foul before the imaginary line and then go the other way. so in reality your statement is not quite true.

Just something I have thought about after seeing some weird stuff on turf fields. The odds in most cases is the defense will make a play on the ball before it has a chance to go foul. Considering how far the ball has to go to cross this imaginary line. They would not want to run the risk of the runner beating the play.

One thing I like about turf fields is the extra outs you get from players over sliding the base.
Once it first lands fair or foul beyond 1st or 3rd, that is the status of the ball. Yes, it is that simple.

The status of a fair/foul ball before 1st or 3rd base depends on where the ball settles if it does not pass 1st or 3rd base. It's nothing until it settles or is touched. Turf doesn't change the definitions of those things.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 01:50pm
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Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
Completely different scenario,

Ball could hit at 90fett 1 inch right by either bag, spin backwards and go foul in front of bag. is why I am asking.
If it first hits fair beyond the demarcation point it is fair - period. It IS the same in both cases because it met the fair criteria.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 10:46pm
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The definition of an imaginary line is a line that is "existing only in one's imagination". Synonyms: unreal, nonexistent, fictional, fictitious, pretend, make-believe, mythical, mythological, fabulous, fanciful, storybook, fantastic.

Which leads to the insanity of this rule in the first place. Fair and foul balls at least have a clear definition on the field (most fields) by a pre-defined chalk or painted line. But, having the ability to judge the position of a batted ball, relative to a line that is imaginary. That in itself is not only quite a feat but, I myself, can't even imagine it.

I can certainly understand your questions however, sometimes some rules just don't make ANY sense at all. This happens to be one of them. It would be interesting to know the history of this.
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Old Sat Feb 28, 2015, 11:48pm
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Originally Posted by jicecone View Post
The definition of an imaginary line is a line that is "existing only in one's imagination". Synonyms: unreal, nonexistent, fictional, fictitious, pretend, make-believe, mythical, mythological, fabulous, fanciful, storybook, fantastic.

Which leads to the insanity of this rule in the first place. Fair and foul balls at least have a clear definition on the field (most fields) by a pre-defined chalk or painted line. But, having the ability to judge the position of a batted ball, relative to a line that is imaginary. That in itself is not only quite a feat but, I myself, can't even imagine it.

I can certainly understand your questions however, sometimes some rules just don't make ANY sense at all. This happens to be one of them. It would be interesting to know the history of this.
I'll call that ball fair when FED requires the line to be painted. But in another forum someone pointed out that this was actually an early OBR definition. I hope this doesn't happen to you.
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Old Sun Mar 01, 2015, 08:56am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jicecone View Post
The definition of an imaginary line is a line that is "existing only in one's imagination". Synonyms: unreal, nonexistent, fictional, fictitious, pretend, make-believe, mythical, mythological, fabulous, fanciful, storybook, fantastic.

Which leads to the insanity of this rule in the first place. Fair and foul balls at least have a clear definition on the field (most fields) by a pre-defined chalk or painted line. But, having the ability to judge the position of a batted ball, relative to a line that is imaginary. That in itself is not only quite a feat but, I myself, can't even imagine it.

I can certainly understand your questions however, sometimes some rules just don't make ANY sense at all. This happens to be one of them. It would be interesting to know the history of this.
You have a similar issue in OBR with an "imaginary" line if the ball hits beyond the 1b-2b line and then spins foul.

It all comes down to the defintion of "beyond". Is it a line between the bases, an arc between the bases, or the square defined by the bases as corners?

For now, FED has chosen (a), while OBR has chosen (c).
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Old Sun Mar 01, 2015, 01:39pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
Rule 2 -5-art 1 –b A fair ball is a batted ball which: b, contacts fair ground on or beyond an imaginary line between first and third base…
Like others have said, once judged fair, it cannot change to foul.


Quote:
Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
Rule 2-16-art 1 a A foul ball is a batted ball: a which settles on foul territory between home and first base or between home and third base..
This is ruling on a batted ball that has not yet been ruled fair, like in the first quote, above.

Quote:
Originally Posted by zebra2955 View Post
Batter hits a ball with back spin which first hits beyond this imaginary line between first and third, spins back and settles in foul territory. By rule you could call it both ways or am I missing something here.
It may be possible to call it both ways, but not legally. The instant a batted ball touches anything or anybody on or over “the imaginary line,” it is legally a fair ball regardless of where it rolls.
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Old Sun Mar 01, 2015, 05:09pm
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Originally Posted by rcaverly View Post
Like others have said, once judged fair, it cannot change to foul. It may be possible to call it both ways, but not legally. The instant a batted ball touches anything or anybody on or over “the imaginary line,” it is legally a fair ball regardless of where it rolls.
Regardless of my opinion of this rule, you are absolutely correct
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