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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sun Mar 07, 2010, 11:14pm
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I think a lot of this has to do with the term "projected" changes.

A change is a change. If a coach comes to the umpire and makes a change, it takes effect immediately.

If the coach makes a statement along the lines of "in the next inning", or as in the OP (two changes involving the same player), to me, that is a projected change as they are asking for something to take effect in the future.
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Old Mon Mar 08, 2010, 06:30am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by IRISHMAFIA View Post
I think a lot of this has to do with the term "projected" changes.
First - - - Very good input from all on this whole thread. I do plan on changing the way I do this on offense and I will start accepting these multiple offensive changes.

The reason I started this was exactly that Mike mentions here about what "projected" means. I do not do ASA now, but when I first started ASA was all I did. My first year (1989), I attended a clinic facilitated by an ASA natioanal staff member. He noted that an offensive batter did not enter the game until they came up to bat and thus future batters were "projected". His specific example is what would you do if you accepted the third batter as a sub and then something happened to the batter or the coach changed their mind before they came up to bat; then you'd have a player subbed-in, then subbed-out, without ever actually entering the game.

After reading these responses and thinking a little more, I agree I was OOO a bit. Example: what if a sub is announced and then trips and busts his lip coming out of the dugout. You would still have a player subbed-in and subbed-out, without ever actually entering the game. (In this example with my old definition, I would have been allowing the couch to "project" the sub as much as 15 seconds in advance of when the sub actually came up. - - - I say in jest.)
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Old Mon Mar 08, 2010, 07:37am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SC Ump View Post
He noted that an offensive batter did not enter the game until they came up to bat
Speaking ASA

This statement is true...well, almost as the player must have a pitch thrown or a play made....as it pertains to the rules involving unreported subs.

Another thing is the reference to batter, fielder, offense and defense. I think the easiest way to approach this subject is to remember when the coach comes to you with a substitution or re-entry, it isn't the the batter or fielder being changed. The change is with the the line-up. What the coach does with that line-up is subject to other rules and restrictions.
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Old Mon Mar 08, 2010, 08:57am
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When is a sub official?

Quote:
Originally Posted by SC Ump View Post
First - - - Very good input from all on this whole thread. I do plan on changing the way I do this on offense and I will start accepting these multiple offensive changes.

The reason I started this was exactly that Mike mentions here about what "projected" means. I do not do ASA now, but when I first started ASA was all I did. My first year (1989), I attended a clinic facilitated by an ASA natioanal staff member. He noted that an offensive batter did not enter the game until they came up to bat and thus future batters were "projected". His specific example is what would you do if you accepted the third batter as a sub and then something happened to the batter or the coach changed their mind before they came up to bat; then you'd have a player subbed-in, then subbed-out, without ever actually entering the game.

After reading these responses and thinking a little more, I agree I was OOO a bit. Example: what if a sub is announced and then trips and busts his lip coming out of the dugout. You would still have a player subbed-in and subbed-out, without ever actually entering the game. (In this example with my old definition, I would have been allowing the couch to "project" the sub as much as 15 seconds in advance of when the sub actually came up. - - - I say in jest.)
Once a sub has been reported to the game umpire they are officially in the game. Therefore, if a coach reports that the first 3 batters are changing, they are official once reported and are not "projected subs".
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Old Mon Mar 08, 2010, 03:46pm
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Originally Posted by rwest View Post
Once a sub has been reported to the game umpire they are officially in the game. Therefore, if a coach reports that the first 3 batters are changing, they are official once reported and are not "projected subs".
Almost true. However, the umpire must accept that reporting before the sub is officially in the game.

Otherwise, there would be no way for the umpire to refuse an illegal substitution, as we are expected to as preventative officiating.
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Old Wed Mar 10, 2010, 11:06am
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How can it be?

Quote:
Originally Posted by AtlUmpSteve View Post
Almost true. However, the umpire must accept that reporting before the sub is officially in the game.

Otherwise, there would be no way for the umpire to refuse an illegal substitution, as we are expected to as preventative officiating.
How can an almost direct quote(i should have said "plate" instead of "game" umpire) from the rule book be almost true? I agree that the plate umpire has to accept the reporting. I assumed, as apparently the rule book does as well, that the umpire has accepted the substitute.

Suppose the coach wants to put in his flex to bat for someone other than the DP? Suppose he still insists on making the sub after you informed him that is illegal? Do you allow the sub and then wait for an appeal by the defense?
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Old Thu Mar 11, 2010, 11:34am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rwest View Post
Suppose the coach wants to put in his flex to bat for someone other than the DP? Suppose he still insists on making the sub after you informed him that is illegal? Do you allow the sub and then wait for an appeal by the defense?
Absolutely. What choice have you? For one of the coaches, it will be a DMC. It might be interesting to see for which coach.
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Old Thu Mar 11, 2010, 05:40pm
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Originally Posted by RadioBlue View Post
Absolutely. What choice have you? For one of the coaches, it will be a DMC. It might be interesting to see for which coach.
You tell the coach "no". And it really doesn't make any difference, what the coach insists upon, it is up to you to accept the change. Just pull a Nancy Reagaon and "just say no". Eventually, you will toss the coach, explain to the assistant why s/he cannot do that and all will be right in the world
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Old Thu Mar 11, 2010, 12:00pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rwest View Post
Do you allow the sub and then wait for an appeal by the defense?
Quote:
RadioBlue: Absolutely. What choice have you? For one of the coaches, it will be a DMC. It might be interesting to see for which coach.
True for ASA. In FED the umpire can discover the illegal sub.

So tell the coach "no;" when he insists, write down the change, point to pitcher and say, "play," call time, call the illegal sub out and send her to the bench.

WMB

Of course you are not going to do that; you are going to talk the coach out of the change. But its fun to hypothesize.
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