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Interference Call?
I'm new at this and have another question.
Ball hit to F6, R1 on Second is advancing to third. R1 steps behind F6 to avoid interference. F6 has the ball get past her a foot or two and turns to make a play and collides with R1. Call? |
Have a nice day:cool:
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How does she turn to make a play without the ball?
Inquiring minds want to know. |
Could be a fake tag... Darn-it, now I have to get in the book :)
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sorry |
Now....another important question needs to be answered. What rule set?
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:rolleyes: train wreck :rolleyes:
we dont need no sticking rule set. |
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nfhs
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In Fed, that is still the initial play on the batted ball, so the call is interference.
In ASA, it is most likely obstruction. In wade's world, it is a train wreck. ;) |
NCAA- Ive got nothing. I'm signaling safe to let everyone know i saw the contact and ruled nothing. I'm will be prepared to explain ruling if asked by coach. But at the same time it would have to depend on how the play happened....one of those have to see to make a call. But from the description above I've got nothing.
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DC: Blue, why no interference?
OC: Blue, why no obstruction? Speaking NCAA. |
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What I wanted to say to the DC... "If your ss had a better coach, maybe she would have worked more on fielding and we wouldn't have an issue." to the OC... "Have you thought about teaching your girls to move on contact? She should have been nowhere near that play." |
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Your timing must be such that the noncall is used when no one else but you noticed or will complain.
When everyone complains - you missed the call that would have limited to only one complaint and would have resulted in an out, unless of course that would negate a game ending run. |
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Well if ya cant beat em join em. |
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In NFHS, this contact HAS to be something. Your initial description of "a foot or two" makes it sound like the initial play (after muffing, still within a step and a reach) applies; if so, has to be interference. If more than a step and a reach, then it must be obstruction. As a personal point of emphasis, the act of turning is often MORE than one step; if that is true (and it generally is), then the initial play has ended, and the fielder is no longer protected. If she literally pivots on one foot, THEN she still has a step and a reach available. We don't want to be rewarding misplays more than the written rule provides. In ASA, as Mike mentioned, there is no initial play definition; if the fielder still has an opportunity to get an out, the fielder is still protected. If the ball was anywhere still in reach, that runner was still a possible out, so it almost has to be interference (in the play you describe). Again, if the ball is farther than that (so that you think the runners would all be safe if no contact), it has to be obstruction. This is, again, NOT a train wreck in ASA; someone has the right of way, and is protected. |
Taking the OP at his word, "foot or two"... have to have pretty short legs and arms for this to not be within a step and reach, turn or no turn.
I agree on the ASA interp, but it is definitely HTBT. Since R1 was running behind F6 and F6 still had not retrieved the ball when the collision happened, a tag would have been unlikely, it seems to me. So, perhaps the out would have been the BR at first or a throw to F5 at third, but that is way too much speculation for the limited info given. That's why I said it was likely obs. But, still HTBT. |
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