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Old Thu Apr 12, 2007, 02:09pm
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Let's hustle in & out, guys!

[B]I am also confused. NHFS Rule 6-2-c (exc.) states; "The starting pitchers may warm up by using not more than eight throws, completed in one minute(timed from the first throw). When a pitcher is replaced during an inning or prior to an inning, the relief pitcher may not use more than eight throws. At the beginning of each subsequent inning, the pitcher may warm up by using not more than five throws, compleated in one minute..."
I always allow the starting pitchers eight throws in the first, than five. Do I have a regional "New England" rule book? I think not. Also, during spring/fall ball, when the temp. is below 40, I allow them to "warm" up as long as they need, although I have never had any pitcher use more than eight. /B]
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Old Thu Apr 12, 2007, 02:24pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by umpire503
[B]I am also confused. NHFS Rule 6-2-c (exc.) states; "The starting pitchers may warm up by using not more than eight throws, completed in one minute(timed from the first throw). When a pitcher is replaced during an inning or prior to an inning, the relief pitcher may not use more than eight throws. At the beginning of each subsequent inning, the pitcher may warm up by using not more than five throws, compleated in one minute..."
I always allow the starting pitchers eight throws in the first, than five. Do I have a regional "New England" rule book? I think not. Also, during spring/fall ball, when the temp. is below 40, I allow them to "warm" up as long as they need, although I have never had any pitcher use more than eight. /B]
Is this the 2007 Rules Book? The only rule governing warm-ups that I can find in the book is rule 6 article 5.
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Old Thu Apr 12, 2007, 02:53pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by umpire503
I always allow the starting pitchers eight throws in the first, than five. Do I have a regional "New England" rule book?
No - you have a high school Baseball rule book. This is a softball board.

WMB
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Old Thu Apr 12, 2007, 03:02pm
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Originally Posted by WestMichBlue
No - you have a high school Baseball rule book. This is a softball board.

WMB
That's what that is!!!!
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Old Fri Apr 13, 2007, 03:36am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WestMichBlue
No - you have a high school Baseball rule book. This is a softball board.

WMB

I was wondering WTH he was talking about.......knew without looking that it wasnt a Fed Softball book....
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Old Sat Apr 14, 2007, 02:45am
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I am hard and fast on between innings/warm up pitches. They have one minute. I am not sitting there with a watch in my hands, but I know how long a minute is. I also know what dawdling is. I'm usually not a ******* when it is with younger groups, but the older they are - or in HS varsity - they best be busting their butts to get out there. Once this year I had a HS team that took well over a minute to get out on the field, and pitcher was last one out. She was *shocked* when I announced "Play Ball." the coach of course had the ultimate argument: "Nobody else has called that on us all year." Of course he could have been right...but he would be the first one to have been right.

Anyway, bounce outta the dugout and you can have five. Dink around for 45 seconds trying to find gloves or a "practice ball" for the right fielder, and ya might get one pitch.

Why am I so hard and fast? If you have them dinking around while you are over chatting up a coach or a cute mom and taking two minutes between each half inning, that's well over 7 minutes you have wasted. If you're in a tournament with 1:20 time limits, that's an inning. With crappy weather like much of the country has experienced so far this year, innings are precious.

If you're in school ball with no time limits, that's 7 minutes earlier your butt is off the field and closing in on the hot tub.

You don't have to be a prick about it, and you don't have to set artificial limits. Just urge them to get a move on by whatever legal means necessary.
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Old Sat Apr 14, 2007, 07:01am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bkbjones
I am hard and fast on between innings/warm up pitches. They have one minute. I am not sitting there with a watch in my hands, but I know how long a minute is. I also know what dawdling is. I'm usually not a ******* when it is with younger groups, but the older they are - or in HS varsity - they best be busting their butts to get out there. Once this year I had a HS team that took well over a minute to get out on the field, and pitcher was last one out. She was *shocked* when I announced "Play Ball." the coach of course had the ultimate argument: "Nobody else has called that on us all year." Of course he could have been right...but he would be the first one to have been right.

Anyway, bounce outta the dugout and you can have five. Dink around for 45 seconds trying to find gloves or a "practice ball" for the right fielder, and ya might get one pitch.

Why am I so hard and fast? If you have them dinking around while you are over chatting up a coach or a cute mom and taking two minutes between each half inning, that's well over 7 minutes you have wasted. If you're in a tournament with 1:20 time limits, that's an inning. With crappy weather like much of the country has experienced so far this year, innings are precious.

If you're in school ball with no time limits, that's 7 minutes earlier your butt is off the field and closing in on the hot tub.

You don't have to be a prick about it, and you don't have to set artificial limits. Just urge them to get a move on by whatever legal means necessary.

very well said ......
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Old Sat Apr 14, 2007, 07:33pm
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That's if you allow only one team to delay. Since both teams might do the same if you allowed it, you have now wasted 13 or 14 of 80 minutes in your 1:20 time limit.

I'm all about that. It just KILLS me that we have no authority in NCAA, and the typical 2:15 Div I game generally includes 3-4 minutes every half inning. Give us the 1 minute rule in NCAA, and most games would play in 1:45 or so, instead.
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Old Sun Apr 15, 2007, 02:25pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AtlUmpSteve
That's if you allow only one team to delay. Since both teams might do the same if you allowed it, you have now wasted 13 or 14 of 80 minutes in your 1:20 time limit.

I'm all about that. It just KILLS me that we have no authority in NCAA, and the typical 2:15 Div I game generally includes 3-4 minutes every half inning. Give us the 1 minute rule in NCAA, and most games would play in 1:45 or so, instead.
But remember Steve, the NCAA passed those rules last year regulating the time a batter/pitcher have between pitches to "speed up the game."
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