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Obstruction Oddity
ASA FP Rules, no modification. R1 on 2nd, no outs. Fly ball to left. Not going to be caught. R1 rounds third and plows (unintentional, but a solid collision) into F1 who is (I'm guessing) moving into position to backup 3rd base. Both umpires have OBS.
The runner cannot be put out between 3rd and home now. Heading forward, this is an easy score, we're awarding home. Somehow, the ball is CAUGHT. A) Runner returns and is tagged between 3rd and home on her way back (this was our actual situation). B) Runner returns and is tagged between 2nd and 3rd on her way back. C) Runner returns to 2nd, the ball gets away, she tries to score and is tagged out short of the plate. Your ruling on all 3? I'll tell you what we did after I hear some answers. The post mortem brought up sitches B and C - the umpire room was not in agreement on whether we did A right nor what the results of B or C would have been.
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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The OBS is negated by the catch, unless ITUJ it prevented the tag up at 2nd.
If not, runner out.
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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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Now this is where I wish the rule was more clear: In D) she rounds third, then the catch, then she starts heading back and now she collides with F5. What do we have? |
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I don't have rule book handy, but I think this would only apply to a BR that was obstructed.
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Ted USA & NFHS Softball |
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I agree with Youngump. I've got an out in A & B as leaving early prior to the touch on a caught fly ball is one of the exceptions to a runner being protected between the bases where the obstruction occurred.
"C" is a little tougher, but I'm gonna say it comes down to umpire judgment. She is no longer protected between 3rd and home on the subsequent attempt to score (even though the obstruction occurred between 3B & HP) because she was required to tag up. However, she WAS obstructed. Now you need to ask yourself, "Did she get put out prior to reaching the base she would have reached had there been no obstruction?" But the tag up needs to come into the equation here. If you feel she could have retreated all the way to 2B and scored, then award home. Otherwise, the out stands. Great sitch, BTW! |
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Of course, it could be that someone else may have a different interpretation, but I'm going strictly by the rules as I read them from the book.
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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That'd get pretty messy. Suppose the runner being knocked down allowed her to make second and if not she'd have clearly been out on appeal. I think you have to make the award assuming all advances were legal and that the runner is going to keep moving forward. (Unless she's obstructed retreating in which case, I wish we had a clearer rule as in my D). |
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At the time of the obstruction, you have two protections; between two bases, and base award to negate affect of the obstruction. You are thinking 1) between third and home, and 2) assumably home. BUT, when the ball is caught, you must consider that the ruling changes!! First, you add the exception; the obstruction, in all liklihood, actually ASSISTED the runner to return on the live ball appeal. So, the appeal, by rule, is an exception. And, realistically, how could you NOT reevaluate what would negate the result of the obstruction?? The running requirements are now substantially different. Instead of simply completing the run home, the runner must retrace to 2nd. The rules, as well as the circumstances, must be cause to reevaluate the award. Consider this. Just suppose the ball was caught an instant prior to the obstruction. Wouldn't you have to consider that the runner needs to return prior to any advance in determining the award? Then, why wouldn't you in this case (an instant after, presumably)? The situation changed; this isn't a "subsequent" play, really, it is the completion of THIS play. But, the protection between two bases doesn't disappear, either. The runner needs only to make it safely back to being between THOSE two bases without having violated any other baserunning rule to retain that protection. I have the same rulings and rationale as Mike in these cases.
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Steve ASA/ISF/NCAA/NFHS/PGF |
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However, couldn't following this approach result in the weird situation where a runner is protected between third and home but not between second and third? If you determine that the base she'd reach is second based on obstruction between third and home then she can be called out after retouching between second and third. After retouching the runner decides to break for third. In a close play she slides in just ahead of the tag. Then she overslides the bag and is called out between the obstructed bases and sent back to second? |
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This was my big question. ASA we aren't supposed to take into account post-obstruction evidence (as you are in some codes).
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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Hmmm.... people smarter than me telling me we were wrong. Must re-evaluate!
Here's what we did. By rule, when an obstructed runner is put out, we have a dead ball, so on the tag we killed the play. (Incidentally, no one was actually yelling "she left early" or anything like it - but it was (to me) obvious they were tagging her because she left early, despite any appeal language at all). Play dead on the tag, runner between the bases where she was obstructed, I felt we could not call her out (here's where I'm re-evaluating, and if someone could quote the exception Mike noted, I'd appreciate... no books at work right now), so I awarded home. Lucky for us, on the award of home, she simply went home. Defense appealed after she left the field and we rung her up then. (So at least the result was right). I'm finding sitch C to be interesting though. Say she made it back to 2nd and then tried to advance --- seems very odd that she'd have no protection between 2nd and 3rd, but be protected between 3rd and home. PS to Steve, she was DEFINITELY aided in her return by the collision, both ending up closer to 3rd when the ball was caught and going forward MUCH slower when she realized she had to return. Not positive it's relevant, but to your point, it was true.
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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Exceptions: ... e. leaving a base before a fly ball was first touched 8-5-1 (as of 2008) |
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where obstructed Exceptions: d. missing a base e. leaving a base before a fly ball was first touched EFFECT d/e: The obstructed runner is out if properly appealed. Mike said exception "d", but it is "e" in the 2009 book.
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Tom |
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The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
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