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Carlos Gomez is one exciting player, but he is no Torii Hunter. Too many bone-head plays and not nearly the power at the plate. There is no one one in the Twins rotation within even "hoping to be there someday" distance of Johan Santana. The only true MLB-level defensive infielder the Twins have is Nick Punto, and he can't hit. This situation is not because there is vast untapped talent in the Twins farm system. |
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The reason you are always confused is because you make too many trips into Amsterdam to pick up deserts (brownies, etc) and tobacco. It wouldn't make any difference whether or not you wore an arm band. Larry:D |
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Take a look at this video from youtube. It is easier to pause the video at least for me. You can clearly see the tag of the glove on the runner during contact at the 1:00 minute mark. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4VTY--IHgU |
1. F2 tagged the runner.
2. Runner never touched the plate. |
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Obviously the call on this is a good one. http://img255.imageshack.us/img255/4017/tag1ni2.jpg http://img255.imageshack.us/img255/4555/tag2va2.jpg Those are two views of the tag, which the was barreled into like a brainless oaf. Now, the next one is why there is an ejection in softball: leaning and throwing an elbow into the back, I dont think there is any question that is an ejection. In fact in softball and any youth sport, its no brainer for anyone except maybe someone with a frozen polluted water brain: http://img262.imageshack.us/img262/6191/ejectqh0.jpg Its also why this thread might also be titled "why softball girls are smarter" Because 99 out of 100 would have been easily safe on this going by the side and touching the plate with their hand.. the catcher would not even have got close. I probably would have been to the side, but on a play where a runner is sliding like that, off to the side and reaching their hand in to catch a piece of the plate, obviously, 3BL is the best angle. I dont think its disputable. |
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Great breakdown and explaination!! If He watches it another 5 times he will either understand........or all the rest of us will have to acknowledge that reguardless of the facts and evidence He is always right and everyone who disagrees is wrong and BLIND as he asserts!!:) |
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Well, I'm from the Philly area and am a lifelong Phillies fan, and I think he got the tag on Bruntlett. Of course, I'm also realistic enough to see that even if he did miss by an inch or three on the play, it would be a hard sell to call the runner safe there. McClelland can put himself wherever he wants. After 30+ years of MLB, he's gonna see what he needs to see. To those talking about crash rules in MLB, well, there are none. That's the thing. |
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The angle from the side seems to be much better, but I don't think there is anything is clear. If you look closely at the side view which seems to show a tag, there is also a shot which looks as if the runner is touching the plate (@58 seconds). However, we know that isn't so from another angle. With the quality of the clips available, I'm still not sure a tag was made, but with the different views and stills, I can see where it could be seen as a tag. I just wish the one person who was reponsible for it was in a better position. |
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