|
|||
NFHS Junior Varsity Game
SITUATION #1 Top of 7th with 2 outs and home team leading by 1 run. Tie run on 2nd base. Batter hits grounder toward short who comes in to make the play. As she is coming in, right about where the baseline is from 2nd to 3rd, the short stop cuts off the running lane causing the runner and herself to dance alittle. A play could have been made to throw out the batter runner at first. Your thoughts: 1) interference on runner, ball dead, game over. 2) obstruction on short stop, delayed dead ball and protect runner to whatever you feel, most likely 3rd. 3) just a tangle up and neither of the above. Let play continue and call nothing. SITUATION #2 As batter runner runs to first on a live batted ball, the coach yells to continue to second and pats her on the back on the way by. Any call to make here. Thanks for your input....Bob 13. By the way, partner called #1 in situation #1. I felt it was the right call. Luckily we got outta there without any problem.
__________________
Bobby |
|
|||
Sit #1 I wasn't there, but I am inclined to protect the fielder so I probably would also have the Int. BTW - the game situation (2 outs, tie run on), IMO, should not enter into your call process. Too much like basketball when two minutes are left in a tight game, anything goes. As far as I am concerned, you have to make that call, even if it is the game ending call.
Sit #2 JV game, early in the season - probably let it go. But will get in a casual comment to the coach, such as "no contact with the runners, Coach or I'll ring you up for Int. next time. WMB |
|
|||
I agree with Bob - on all 3 points.
Interference for #1, the fielder has an absolute right to be there and the runner has an absolute duty to avoid interference. A congratulatory pat on the back is not assisting a runner, so that's nothing. But that pat on the back would be something I'd not do if I coached - way too many lawyers out there. Steve M |
|
|||
Well, I guess I'm going to be the anal knucklehead here 'cause if it is a live ball, I'm ruling the runner out for assistance.
If the ball is leaving the field of play, no problem. However, I don't see where there is cause for a congratualory pat on the back as the runner apparently hasn't reach her final destination safely. Would you ignore the same thing happening at 3B? Probably not and if you are going to make the call at 3B anytime during the game, you need to make it at 1B anytime during the game. It is the coach's responsibility to stay out of the play. There are also two teams out there that expect you to call the rules and, as we always seem to be reminded, "both ways!" What if the same thing happens two inning later, but this time it looks more like a push? Do you ignore it then? Where does one draw the line over the seriousness of a violation and whether to call it or not? I'm not suggesting an umpire guess at it, but if I see the coach contact the runner and it is plain as day it occured, I would want to make that call and better earlier than later. JMHO,
__________________
The bat issue in softball is as much about liability, insurance and litigation as it is about competition, inflated egos and softball. |
|
|||
I agree with with the majority here ruling interference and game over. The fielder has the right to make the play on the ball and the runner has the responsibility to avoid the fielder. The same as if the ball was a pop up and the infielder was camped in the baseline it would be up to the runner to avoid the contact. Any contact in that situation would be interference.
I've got nothing in the second situation, but would mention it to the coach between innings.
__________________
Tony Vechiola Carol Stream, Illinois NFHS ASA |
|
|||
Quote:
Sit#2 - the rule is against "physically assisting," not touching. A push is assisting. A touch is not necessarily assisting. Suppose the coach & runner had exchanged a high 5 on the way by? Is that assisting? No. The coach's pat on the back would the HTBT judgment, but I'd probably not call it, but warn the coach he should cut it out.
__________________
Tom |
|
|||
Quote:
|
|
|||
Hey!
Here's the deal.. In situation #1 nothing was said about what happened to the ball being fielded..Did the SS misplay the ball? Did she have to go to her left or right and the runner interfere when she did so? I heard they 'did a little dance'. Was there any contact? Did the runner do something intentional? Maybe the runner was trying to avoid the fielder to the best of her abilities. It's true that this is on of those plays you have to see, but with info given it sounds like either nothing or obstruction. -RP |
|
|||
It sounds to me that the only thing it can't be is obstruction. The wording "herself to dance alittle. A play could have been made " says that the SS playing the ball had to adjust, so it has to be interference. The fielder's opportunity to play the ball takes precedence over the runner's base path.
|
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Tom |
|
|||
[QUOTE]Originally posted by robbiep
[B]Hey! " Was there any contact? " You don't have to have contact for interference! glen
__________________
glen _______________________________ "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." --Mark Twain. |
|
|||
OK-
You guys are not getting my drift..In situation #1, why are they 'dancing'? Is they ball through? If it is then there is no other call but obstruction because the fielder's opportunity to field the ball is over. Contact is just one criteria for interference, so don't take that to the 'nth' degree..Yes, the fielder has every right to field the ball, however if the runner is just doing her job i.e. trying to avoid her or'dancing'and she does so, without contact, and she doesn't do anything intentional how can you call interference? RP |
|
|||
The fielder has an absolute right to try to field the ball.
The runner has an obligation to not interfere. Quote:
It doesn't matter if the ball was through if the fielder muffed the play because she held up to avoid a collision; the runner interfered by causing the fielder to hold up or to take her eyes off the ball, or ...
__________________
Tom |
|
|||
Quote:
As to whether the ball is through, the phrase "As she is coming in" in the original question means going toward the ball (IMO). Also, contact and intent do not matter, just interfering or not. |
Bookmarks |
|
|