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The Play
I've done a little editing for an easier read, but Tom McCarville originally posted the play on Eteamz.
Start of play score = 9-7 top of 6th, favor the "D". Sacs loaded. One out. Obvious extra base hit possibility by "BR". R1 from 3rd scores. R2 from 2nd comes home looks like 9-9 but missed 3rd base on the way home. R3 from 1st had also scored on the play. At that point it looks like 10-9 for the "O" team. "BR" going into 2nd after touching 1st base slows up when ball gets to the infield near 2nd base & gets in a "pickle". "BR" got caught in a run down". Ruled out by running out of the baseline. Out # 2. That runner was ruled out after the R3 from 1st scored. No runners on base & 10-9 score favoring the "O". Then the "D" calls for an appeal on R2 for missing 3rd. Ump rules "OUT". Then stated 3rd out & only the 1st runner scored because R2 actually made the 3rd out on appeal, therefore the following "R"'s couldn't score. Ending top of the 6th with score 9-8 favoring the "D". "O" wants to protest the Umps ruling. Ump takes protest. After the discussion re: the ruling, he calls game because its to dark to continue. Game over 9-8 & old "D" wins the game as "O" protests the win.
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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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My reply from etz
I've got to restate this for my own clarity.
R1, R2, R3. Score 9-7. O has 7. 1 out. R1, R2, R3 cross home. BR tagged out between 1st and 2nd for the 2nd out. R2 is appealed for missing 3B. R2 declared out on appeal for the 3rd out. R2's score is nullified. R3's score is nullified (ASA 5-3-B-3 2005 book; 2006 book is at home). Protest rejected. Mike R, why is this not correct? -------- After I posted the above on etz, I noticed Mike's reply that he was focused on the force aspect.
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Tom |
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To me there are two issues.
One is - if the appeal out is a force, no runs score. I believe there's a direct quote in the book that says that the status of the play AT THE TIME OF THE APPEAL is what matters (as opposed to OBR Baseball's "at the time of the runner reaching the base" timing). In fact, I think the book specifically says that if BR is put out behind the runner in question, that the appeal is no longer a force for the purposes of this rule. The second is - does the succeeding runner (r3 on first) score. I believe 5-5-c is the right rule, but if not, it's close to that. It says something along the lines of "No run shall score if a preceding runner is called out on appeal for the 3rd out". So I have 1 run scoring on this play.
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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I agree based on "No run shall score if a preceding runner is called out on appeal for the 3rd out""; but if I was ruling on the protest, I would have to double-check on whether it applied to whatever rule set was involved.
OK, but it must be something not obvious or Mike wouldn't have posted it.
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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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What I am wondering is if that out is not considered a "force" out for nullifying runs since at the time she missed the base she would have only been the 2nd out. So if in this play the BR would have been safe at 2nd and there was an appeal, we would have 2 runs score correct?
So since the appeal came after the runners scored, and the BR had a timing type play for the 2nd out at the time, but 3rd out in actuality as the runner had already missed 3rd base and had an out (2nd out) waiting for appeal. Thinking through the 4th out appeal rule to nullify runs, the only reason you can nullify all the runs is if the missed base was one that the runner was forced to and their missing the base was the 3rd out of the inning. So why I brought this up is my thinking is in the OP the runner missing 3rd would have only been the 2nd out of the inning, thus the R1 and R3's runs score. |
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There is no force. By rule, for the purpose of an appeal, the runner's status is that at the time of the appeal, not the infraction.
And by rule, a trailing runner cannot score if a preceding runner is the third (or fourth) out. It's just going to be a hard sell considering the run scored prior to the 2nd out. Ouch! I thank MC for catching the paragraph I missed. One run scores.
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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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After all this, it appears as if the umps on the field ruled correctly.
I wonder if they knew the ruling and applied it or if they were correct by accident?
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It's what you learn after you think you know it all that's important! |
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One of the confusing things for me in this string was the force issue. I cannot find any circumstance where an appeal would be considered a force. All appeals are NOT a force. Now my syntax is starting to sound like the NFHS test, but I think you all understand what I am trying to say.
Bugg |
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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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Bugg, change it to 2 outs, and take away the out on BR, and this is a force out on appeal, and NO runs score.
Or on a 2-out Bases loaded homer, R3 from 1st misses 2nd base and is appealed after everyone comes home and the ball is made live. The appeal on R3 is a force, and no runs score.
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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In ASA, if the batter is put out, all force plays are off, and no subsequent out can be a force out (excepting some TWP where a runner reinstates his force by retreating). Therefore, the appeal at 3B is not a force play. Only one run scores. But whether it was a force play or not, no runs can score behind the runner called out for missing 3B for the third out.
In OBR, the appeal at 3B would be a force play, because the runner was forced at the time he missed the bag. But the point is moot in this case, as no following runners could score anyway.
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greymule More whiskey—and fresh horses for my men! Roll Tide! |
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Quote:
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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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Here is my interp:
From the ASA rule book, Points of Emphasis, POE #1: "J) Force Out: If an appeal is honored at a base to which a runner was forced to advance and the out is a force out, no runs would score if it was the third out.... R2 was forced to advance to 3B. . . .If the batter-runner is put out or is the first out on multiple outs on the same play, this would eliminate all force outs. We can't take this literally. Common sense can only mean if the B-R was retired before reaching 1B. And all runners to the next base. Therfore R2 was forced to 3B. On an appeal play, the force out is determined when the appeal is made, not when the infraction occured." In this sitch, the force out was made as a result of the appeal which puts the 3rd out as the force out. Therfore no runs score on this play. |
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No, if the BR is retired, there can NEVER be a force out.
As I said, it would take a TWP. Abel on 2B, Baker on 1B, 1 out. Charles flies deep to center. Abel takes off toward 3B. F8 makes the catch and Abel returns to 2B but in his meth stupor forgets what base he had started on and continues toward 1B. As Abel is halfway back to 1B and beginning to wonder why Baker is standing on 1B, the defense throws to 2B to FORCE Abel, who had retreated and reinstated the force.
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greymule More whiskey—and fresh horses for my men! Roll Tide! |
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