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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jun 22, 2009, 11:23am
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The non-voting umpire on the NCAA rules committee is from Massachusettes and he is planning to/is in the process of writing a proposed rule change that would not be voted on until the 2011 season. It is something that has been suggested and discussed on this board in the past and that is to move the circle so that the front of the circle is the pitchers plate and allow the pitcher any such motion/step/angle they desire such that their landing foot remains completely within/behind the circle/pitcher's plate.

This has been discussed amongst some of us here in the area who are familiar with the individual on the committee and the 'rumor' has been getting around, at least within our area/region. I am not certain when the committee meets again, but I do know that a final draft of the rule is to be ready for that meeting.
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Old Mon Jun 22, 2009, 01:51pm
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Originally Posted by CelticNHBlue View Post
... that is to move the circle so that the front of the circle is the pitchers plate and allow the pitcher any such motion/step/angle they desire such that their landing foot remains completely within/behind the circle/pitcher's plate.
Wouldn't it be hard to step toward the plate and remain in a circle that has it's front at the pitcher's plate? How can you keep your landing foot behind pitcher's plate and step toward home plate?

I can't picture what you mean by this.
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Old Mon Jun 22, 2009, 02:44pm
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Originally Posted by marvin View Post
Wouldn't it be hard to step toward the plate and remain in a circle that has it's front at the pitcher's plate? How can you keep your landing foot behind pitcher's plate and step toward home plate?

I can't picture what you mean by this.
I do not understand how this will work either.
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Old Mon Jun 22, 2009, 03:12pm
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The only problem (a big one IMO) is that 2'-6" is not enough of a distance to prevent the pitcher from hitting the 40' plat when dragging. I worked a Gold tournament last year and there was a canyon dugout between the two plates. We had some outrageous scores at that level because the pitchers had to adjust to the conditions and could not throw their normal pitches.
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Old Mon Jun 22, 2009, 03:21pm
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Originally Posted by vcblue View Post
The only problem (a big one IMO) is that 2'-6" is not enough of a distance to prevent the pitcher from hitting the 40' plat when dragging. I worked a Gold tournament last year and there was a canyon dugout between the two plates. We had some outrageous scores at that level because the pitchers had to adjust to the conditions and could not throw their normal pitches.
I think we may be comparing apples and oranges here. The distance between pitcher's plates would/might occur in high school games where both varsity and sub-varsity games are played. That's why I think it would be a problem w/ multiple PPs. When I pitched from 46 feet, and there was a second PP at 40', it was very distracting to me. Not that I could leap 5 and a half feet, but having a ball hit off that front plate was a bit scary.

The college scenario sounds like the PP would be moved about 8 feet closer to HP and that would be the "front" part of a 16' diameter circle. So a pitcher could start anywhere from about 16' behind the PP, leap, jump, crow hop, etc., deliver the ball and as long as she didn't hit or cross over the PP, that would be considered legal. Sounds a bit radical.

Or, is it leave the PP where it is, and simply move the whole circle back?

CelticNHBlue - did I grasp the concept?
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Last edited by Tru_in_Blu; Mon Jun 22, 2009 at 03:25pm.
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Old Mon Jun 22, 2009, 05:14pm
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Mike has the concept pretty well summarized. The distance of the front, or closest point of the circle is still a question.

The circle is currently independant of the pitching plate and is only to be considered for the purposes of the LBR. Now, the forward perimeter is also the pitching 'limit' and is the sole issue for determing illegal pitches.
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Old Mon Jun 22, 2009, 03:15pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by marvin View Post
Wouldn't it be hard to step toward the plate and remain in a circle that has it's front at the pitcher's plate? How can you keep your landing foot behind pitcher's plate and step toward home plate?

I can't picture what you mean by this.
A couple years ago, myself and a few others on another board had tossed around the idea of just moving the PP back to whatever, say 46', maybe 50'. Eliminate the rules concerning leaping, crow hopping, 24" pitching lane, contact with both feet, etc.

Basically, it was that the pitcher could do whatever they pleased as long as they started from a stop in contact with the PP, delivered the ball in the same underhand manner and stayed inside the same circle.
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