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Rule on this one.
Bases loaded, 2 out.
BR hits a ball off the fence, misses 1B, and proceeds around the bases. With the ball still being kicked around in the outfield, BR, though he had a clear path to home plate, deliberately crashes F2, knocking him 15 feet, and then touches the plate. You call BR out for the deliberate USC crash and eject him. The defense then appeals BR's miss of 1B. What would your ruling be?
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greymule More whiskey—and fresh horses for my men! Roll Tide! |
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Mike R Suwanee, GA |
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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 guess is greymule is poking at the issue of 4th out appeal only on a runner who has scored.
In the situation, once the play is complete, the umpire will most likely eject the BR. The umpire can also declare the BR out and nullify the run scored by the BR (ASA case play 10.8-1) for flagrant misconduct. So, suppose the umpire does this. Now, the BR has no longer scored. Hence, the 4th out appeal may not be honored by rule. I'd honor it anyway under the circumstances. I'd use 10-1-L to reverse the OUT call on the BR (but not the ejection), and then enforce the 4th out appeal. No runs score.
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Tom |
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My take on this one is this: The defense should not be penalized for an act of the offending offfensive player. The spirit of the rule is to allow the defense to appeal the missed base thereby nullifying the runs.
The player is ejected when the play is over and not before. If you called the out and then ejected him - then he doesnt score and its 3 runs saved on the appeal. I wouldnt even play a game of semantics on this one. |
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I'd use 10-1-L to reverse the OUT call on the BR.
Clever way out. I'd have to revise the OP to say that after creaming F2, BR never does touch the plate but gives F2 a couple of kicks in the ribs before proceeding to the dugout. Then the appeal at 1B.
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greymule More whiskey—and fresh horses for my men! Roll Tide! |
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Tom |
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There is no force out at first nullifying the runs. Any baserunner who crossed the plate before the appeal or the out/ejection would score and the the run would stay on the books.
Once a runner has crossed a base he is assumed to have touched that base until an appeal is made. 2 outs with R1 on 3rd, B2 hits a fast grounder to right field. B2 crosses the base (but does not touch the orange part of the bag) before the throw from right field reaches F3 you MUST call B2 safe. During this time R1 scores. As B2 walks back to first base, she is tagged by the first baseman who appeals she didn't touch the base. Run scores and the inning counts. Last edited by blu_bawls; Fri Jun 16, 2006 at 09:44pm. |
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Tom |
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That cannot be right. No runs can score if the third out is a result of the BR not reaching 1B safely (5.5.B.1, CB 5.5-8, 5.5-9 & 5.5-10)
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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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