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Home run or not???
Temp fence. Ball to outfield, OF goes back, steps on fence enough to tilt the fence out about a foot. Ball come down on top of now tilted fence and bounces over fence.
OF did not touch ball. Is this a home run or a ground rule double? The logic used was that the OF caused the fence to be tilted thus it's a ground rule double. That's what was ruled. Didn't make sense to me at the time but wasn't my call in final decision. I'm say home run because the top of the fence was even further back from normal and if ball hit the top of the tilted fence it would have been out of the park with a non tilted fence. What say you?
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Wish I'da umped before I played. What a difference it would'a made! ![]() |
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Penalizing the batter because the defense moved the fence???
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Officiating takes more than OJT. It's not our jobs to invent rulings to fit our personal idea of what should and should not be. |
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Quote:
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Officiating takes more than OJT. It's not our jobs to invent rulings to fit our personal idea of what should and should not be. |
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In the abstract:
If fence fails, the umpire presumably has to insert best judgement as to where it should have been. If a cheap, bendable fence bends and is the ground-rule defined boundary, absent another specific rule, wouldn't you play the fence as the boundary wherever the wind and reasonable/game-related action takes it? (Otherwise, get a better fence or define a different boundary . . .) |
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Concepts and thought process:
A batted ball which clears the home run fence in flight over fair territory is a 4 base award (home run). A batted ball which bounds (or is otherwise grounded) over the home run fence in fair territory is a 2 base award. A batted ball remains in flight until it touches the ground, or another object which "grounds" it. When a batted ball hits the top of a permanent fence and bounds over, it remains in flight and a home run; thus the fence by itself does not ground the ball. Equally, the defensive player alone does not ground the ball. Only a ball which hits the fence THEN the defensive player is grounded. Every major rule set addresses a displaced temporary fence. In USA/ASA, it remains part of live ball territory (so far, "in the park"); in NCAA and NFHS, it is a home run if already beyond the base of the fence (home run line). Conclusion: Nothing in the OP resulted in the ball being grounded, so by definition it must be in flight. Result stated in first paragraph.
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Steve ASA/ISF/NCAA/NFHS/PGF |
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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