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Outs on runners closest to home typically occur when a player who has already been put out interferes with a play. |
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I can slice this about 3 different ways, but always end up with 1 out. 1) BR is out when the ball gains "fair" status - which is exactly when it contacts him. So he's out on the IFF at the same moment he's struck by a batted ball, and out for that too. No logic requires a 2nd out here. 2) 8-2-I: I. When an infield fly is declared and the fair batted ball hits the batter-runner before reaching first base. EFFECT: The ball is dead and the infield fly is invoked. 3) If you (for whatever reason) insist that BR is out the instant IFF is called - then we have an offensive team member (retired runner) being struck by a batted ball - so all the plays about a runner being struck by a batted ball do not apply - this player is no longer a runner, and you can only use 8-7-P, which would only be an out if a play was available at the moment the ball struck the retired runner... which it's not. The non-umpire peanut gallery where this was initially posted were nearly unanimous in their support of 2 outs... as were a slight majority of the umpires. I feel better now that I (and Dave, who also posted there) are not insane. Or if we are, it's not because of this. |
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1) The person who interferes is always the person that is out. (Here is the NCAA exception that would only cloud this point). 2) If the person that interferes cannot be called out on interference, it is always (again, except one exception for the traditional "turning two in the middle" doubleplay) the runner closest to home that is out. #2 exists to cover 1) offensive players that are already out (like on an IFF:D), 2) runners that have already scored, 3) offensive coaches, 4) on-deck batters, and 5) whatever idiot on the offensive team that left loose equipment on the field. There may be a type 6, but I can't think of one. So, you are asking about a #1 interference penalty, when this thread is dealing with one form of #2 (NO, there isn't any such designation, just referring within this post for clarity.) |
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NFHS 8.2.9, NCAA 12.4.7 say "when she hits" That would mean the out actually occurs before the "call" and before the fair/foul determination; so the B is already out before anything else happens. |
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I have not found "the batter is out" on an infield fly. :confused: |
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The question of when the batter is out when she hits a ball that could be called an IF is when the status of the ball has been determined (fair or foul).
As mentioned in other posts, a ball could be hit in the infield where no one makes a play on it. It lands between 2B and the pitcher's plate and then spins foul between home and either 1B or 3B. At that point, the ball is foul, the batter is not out. So clearly, the batter is not out when the ball is struck or even when the umpire delcares an IF. If a ball close to the 1B line hits the BR in fair territory, it's a dead ball and the BR is out. If it was a super high fly ball and the runner from 3B was running on the pitch and touched home before the ball hit the BR, I think you score that run. Dissenters? |
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:confused:
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"[Batter-runner is out] When an infield fly is declared. If the fair batted ball hits the batter-runner before reaching first base, the ball is dead and the infield fly is invoked." The latest version of the rule runs both sentences together so that it reads, "When an infield fly is declared and the fair batted ball hits the batter-runner before reaching first base." Why the change? Heck, you could almost read it as saying that the ball HAS to hit the batter-runner to invoke the IFR! :p |
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Regarding your last sentence, that's true. the ball HAS to hit the batter runner to invoke THIS rule. Luckily for all of us, there are many other parts to this rule to describe the other ways IFR might come into play. |
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The older version is just as clear to me, if not more so. |
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