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And my comment even touched on that.
If you aren't going to tell the coach "No" (and I don't think you should), then should you tell him "Yes"? If not, are you really going to make him go through the rigamarole of phrasing a "proper appeal" just so you can rule the runner safe? I highly doubt it. Just rule on the appeal. |
Tell him "yes", and you'll still be ejecting the OC (when the DC tells F2 "tag her anyway, just to make sure", and you say "out!").
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Let me rephrase. If she had touched the plate, would you answer the coach with "yes" when he asked his question, or would you make him rephrase his question in the form of an appeal...just so you can rule safe?
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That's just wrong on many levels. I don't do NCAA, but I'm clear that this is one of those subtle differences between ASA (coach cannot appeal during a dead ball) and NFHS (coach can appeal during a dead ball). After time out is called: Coach: "Blue, did she touch the plate?" Me: "Coach, you'll need to appeal to find out." There's no penalty for an appeal. Once S/he goes back to the dugout and (depending upon sanction) a proper appeal is made, I'll rule on it. Sheesh! |
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After time out is called: Coach: "Blue, did she touch the plate?" Me: "Catch, what did your coach say?" Catcher: "Did she touch the plate." Me: "Out"! :D |
my bad... brain cramp... totally forgot about the dead ball due to OBS in the OP.
In a dead ball sit, their question is good enough for me as an appeal. (live ball, no answer whatsoever) |
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