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Fixed it for ya!
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Since Hrbek was brought up (of course, we knew it would be), the umpire that made the call explained that the runner has to maintain control of his body after contact with the bag, and that (in his judgment) Gant was falling off the base and would have broken contact with or without Hrbek.
You can't make the same argument for the play in this thread, but you can make the comparison that MNBlue did... if a (legal) collision can cause the loss of control of the ball, why can't a (legal) collision cause the loss of contact with the bag? Change the timing of the play by just a fraction of a second... tag is applied just before the foot touches the bag, but the collision causes the ball to fall out. Safe, right? Why does the offense get the right to demonstrate loss of control of the ball, but the defense doesn't have the parallel right to demonstrate loss of control of the body in maintaining contact with the bag? BTW, I would not have ruled that an out in amateur fastpitch, but the discussion is interesting... |
Yes
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Safe in ASA. Safe in NCAA SB. Safe in Dixie. Safe in USSSA. Safe in USFA. Safe in NFHS. Safe in LL SB.
Safe in MLB. Safe in other OBR. Safe in NCAA BB. Safe in Pony. Safe in LL BB. I'm sure I missed a few, but I hope I was clear in my opinion. (I do agree that it's rather odd that this is not officially covered by the rules in ANY of these codes). (Hrbek ruling was bad as well, but it was bad in judgement and not rule. There's no way Gant's momentum suddenly causes his leg to lift straight up.) |
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I suggested the "runner sliding scenario" as no different - two players playing the game and the end result might just be what it is - out or safe... The question is, what (if anything) makes this play different? |
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I'm with your point; and with the explanation given in the Hrbek/Gant play (but disagree with the judgment!!). If the runner has no more control of his/her body than to come off when the defense is applying a normal tag, then that runner is out. But when added force is applied (like this running collision) and that causes the runner to come off, I have a dead ball and a safe runner. |
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I'm in agreement that once the runner is safe, contact by the defense that causes the runner to disengage should not be rewarded. Let's extrapolate from the video. What will you use (besides common sense) to judge that the runner's momentum caused the disengagement and not the contact by the defense? |
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I'd like to hear more about the dead ball call, and why. Particularly, as someone noted, if there are other active runners.
Obs = DDB Int = DB If DB, then must have been Int. If Int, the runner is out. That doesn't parse my logic meter... Perhaps the ball just remains live until playing action ceases? Sort out the guy being knocked off the base during a time out? |
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