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Federation play
Federation rules
One of our umpires had a play in a scrimmage yesterday. Our commissioner gave us the ruling and stated it came from the National Office. I am going to call him back and make sure of what he said before I give you his/their answer. In the meantime, you can give your thoughts. Bases loaded, 1 ball, 2 strikes. 2 outs. Next pitch is a strike that the catcher misses. The batter backs away from home plate, the runner from 3rd runs home and is safe on play at the plate. Pitcher covered. Umpire lets the dust settle, calls time, cleans the plate, looks up and sees the batter back to the side and rear of home plate. What are you going to do? Last edited by ronald; Sat Mar 14, 2009 at 10:34am. Reason: keep interpreter out of hot water if indy reads this play |
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If that fails, I'm going to invoke my authority to fix the defense being put in jeopardy by mistake and I'm going to call the batter out for abandoning his attempt to get to first base and nullify the run. I could see a strong case for having this be an inadvertent call of time resulting in the runner being safe at first, but if the batter wasn't advancing I think I'd go for I put the defense in jeopardy. [Oh, and I don't think the ruleset matters... but if after the play at the plate they gunned down the runner from 2nd coming into third, then I'd score the run in ASA.] ________ Live Sex Webshows Last edited by youngump; Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 06:46pm. |
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Bases loaded, 2 outs, dropped third strike; every base is a force out. You should have quit while you were ahead.
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Steve ASA/ISF/NCAA/NFHS/PGF |
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Sticking to Fed...
The rule specifically says "rectify any situation in which an umpire’s decision that was reversed has placed either team in jeopardy." (10-2-3-m) What umpire decision was reversed? Calling TIME is not a decision in this context. The case book gives these examples of a reversed decision: 10.2.3-D inadvertent OUT call results in player tagged out. -F, -G, -H "Ball 4" call reversed with checked swing appeal. In the OP's case, there is no call that was reversed. Only an untimely TIME. Besides, I would even argue that the defense was NOT put in jeopardy here. Apparently, the defense had no intention of attempting to put the BR (not batter) out.
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Tom Last edited by Dakota; Fri Mar 13, 2009 at 11:56am. |
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________ Sunset Boulevard Residence Prathumnak Last edited by youngump; Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 06:47pm. |
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________ condos Pattaya Last edited by youngump; Mon Sep 19, 2011 at 06:47pm. |
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Not sure that I would have called a time out to clean the plate without first calling the batter out for abandonment.
However the OP, time was called, therefore, Under Rule 5-2-2-b, a runner may not advance when the ball becomes dead. Once I noticed the batter still at home plate I would bring the ball live when the pitcher has the ball within the 16 foot circle and I (the umpire) calls and/or signals "Play Ball" and gives a beckoning hand signal (Rule 5-1-4) Once the ball is live I will call the batter out. |
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Can we...
Can we not get in the slot, put the ball back in play, hold up the pitcher from pitching and then in a loud voice say "Batter, that was a dropped third strike" and then just stand there staring at the batter-runner and wait for someone to do something? I would yell it loud enough so that everyone can hear, including my partner and the pitcher, since she probably has the ball at this time.
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Gwinnett Umpires Association Multicounty Softball Association Multicounty Basketball Officials Association |
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Not sure that I would call the BR out for "abandonment"....in this play.
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Will Rogers must not have ever officiated in Louisiana. |
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Actually, what MGKBLUE says is correct. Rule 8-2-4 plus Case Play 8.1.1-A, Ruling (2). Quote:
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Tom |
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But these don't apply
The BR never entered dead ball territory so 8-2-4 doesn't apply. Case Play 8.1.1-A part 1 also doesn't apply for the same reason, she didn't enter dead ball territory. Part 2 doesn't seem a likely solution either. The umpire called strike three. Are you going to let the pitcher throw another pitch to this batter? The BR was still standing there probably because she either forgot the pitch count or didn't realize a strike was called. She apparently thinks she is still at bat. In fact in every scenario in this case play the batter thinks she is out and forgets she can run to first and then realizes it latter or is trying to fake out the defense. In the OP it appears the batter is just clueless.
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Gwinnett Umpires Association Multicounty Softball Association Multicounty Basketball Officials Association |
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I agree the rule itself says "fails to advance to first base and enters the team area", but the case play says if she just plain never advances, she is out. She does not need to start to advance to become a BR. She is a BR by virtue of the D3K. She just does not advance.
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Tom |
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However, I agree with Tom on the case play item #2 meaning until it is time for the next pitch, even if another batter has not appeared. In the OP, it seems the batter thought it was a steal of HP and did not register that it was strike 3, DMB. ![]()
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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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