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F5 is straddling 3B awaiting throw, R1 is coming into 3B. Consider the following:
Yes, there is a direct path to the base for R1 to slide into. But - F5 is dictating the base path by taking away the outside slide, F5 is funneling R1 into her glove, F5 is taking away the space over the bag, thus not allowing R1 to stay upright and possible run through the bag F5 is forcing a slide; if the play is not close, is this the same as a fake tag? If R1 goes into a slide straight to the bag prior to F5 having possession of the ball, will you call obstruction? You know, of course, that it will be a hard sell! WMB |
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Before I present my answer to this scenario specifically, let me make the following point:
THE RUNNER HAS THE RIGHT TO THE WHOLE BASE, NOT JUST WHAT THE DEFENSE "ALLOWS" THEM TO HAVE! Quote:
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It's what you learn after you think you know it all that's important! |
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I would generally say no given what you described. If F5 is stradding with her body behind the bag, not over it,to the point where the glove would end up being the closest to the bag and we were looking at a semi close play I don't think I'd have impediment. As for taking away the outside corner slide, one could say that the inside corner was taken away when F5 sets up on the home plate side (maybe a bit of a stretch but still true). Unless there is no real play at the bag and the runner wants to keep on going I think I'm OK with the straddle.
Until I'm shown to be wrong. |
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Jimmy, PLEASE re-read the obstruction rule... you are looking at the whole thing wrong. F5 has no right to set up ANYwhere if she doesn't have the ball, and if she does, and it alter's the runner's actions, it's OBS.
All of these are easy - they all come down to the same question: Did the runner alter their actions DUE TO a fielder being in the basepath without possession of the ball? All of these COULD be obstruction. All of these COULD be nothing. The fake tag one could be an ejection, depending on whether it was truly a fake tag. |
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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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mcrowder,
No offense but I believe I have a handle on the obstruction rule as well as anyone on here. Your not saying anything different than I was, just changing the phrasing. Once again, given the scenario first presented by WestMichBlue I see no obstruction until something happens. If obstruction was 100% cut and dry we wouldn't continue to bring up the various possibilities. |
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Andy,
Nicely put - you're showing that you or someone who's taught you have been around Emily (as long as you don't look like her, that's a good thing). And I agree completely.
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Steve M |
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Rule Book is a guide
I definitely would not call obstruction. Straddling the base is acceptable and it is clear there was going to be a play at that base so it is obvious that the runner would slide. By straddling the base you keep the main side of the bag available to the runner. The runner should slide for safety reasons on a play.
As for the rule book, I have been told by the State Umpire-In-Chief that it is merely a guideline. You are the one making the judgment call and as long as you give a definite "call" it doesn't matter if someone disagrees. You are the one running the game. No one sees the play the way you do. |
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Welcome to the board kbowton.
Now: I definitely would not call obstruction. Straddling the base is acceptable and it is clear there was going to be a play at that base so it is obvious that the runner would slide. Why would it be obvious that the runner would slide? There is not a must slide rule, just a "cannot crash into the fielder rule".
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glen _______________________________ "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." --Mark Twain. |
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Re: Change in Obstruction Rule
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Tom |
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heavier sigh .. ..
Your scenario is not an obstruction call until.. the player blocks the base without the ball.
The fielder is required to give the offense a view of the base. Clearly if they are stradling the base, the offence has the view. If the play is to be that close that the fielder would elect to straddle the base, then the offense would be looking to slide. .. it must be close, else why would the fielder set him/herself up to create such an obvious obstruction!!!!!! Get in the game you guys.. We are here to make the decisions that the game can't make for itself. Not make decisions on a play that may not actually occur before it happens. A TCU once said " see the play and call the play" |
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In viewing the scenarios and the responses to them, I am learning more as a 2d year umpire. I understand that seeing the play is just as important as understanding the rules and making an appropriate (hopefully correct) call.
Thanks to everyone who offers their constructive and patient comments. |
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