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I'm having trouble knowing where to find documentation or a rule cite that says EITHERr:
Ball hits bat means a STATIONARY bat... in all codes OR if both the bat and ball are moving, then you have the bat hitting the ball and a dead ball. (regardless of direction)
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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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For ASA you can find it in RS 24.B
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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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Sorry for being a pain, but unless it has changed, my electronic version of an ASA rule book (dated 2008) doesn't reference the bat's status as being stationary. It simply states in general terms the difference between a bat hitting a ball and vice versa.
The same is the case with the examples listed in the NCAA rule book: Hitting the Ball a Second Time Batter Bat Batted Ball Effect In box In hands Fair or foul Foul ball Out of box In hands Fair Batter out Out of box In hands Foul (accidental) Foul ball Out of box In hands Foul (intentional) Batter out In/out of box Out of hands (ball hits bat) Fair Live In/out of box Out of hands (ball hits bat) Foul Foul ball In/out of box Out of hands (bat hits ball) Fair Batter out In/out of box Out of hands (bat hits ball) Foul (accidental) Foul ball In/out of box Out of hands (bat hits ball) Foul (intentional) Batter out So, other than in interpretations that I assume are given in clinics, I don't see anything that talks of the bat rolling away from the ball, but the ball catching up and contacting the bat before the bat becomes stationary. (Edited to add) Sorry how it looks on screen. I tried to add spaces between the column entries...
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"Let's face it. Umpiring is not an easy or happy way to make a living. In the abuse they suffer, and the pay they get for it, you see an imbalance that can only be explained by their need to stay close to a game they can't resist." -- Bob Uecker |
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The book doesn't parse out a difference between cases when both the ball and bat are still in motion when they touch. No "Do this when the ball is moving faster than the bat, but Do something else if the bat is moving faster than the ball". No "Do something completely different if the bat happens to be moving away from the ball instead of toward it". If a moving bat and a ball collide - rule accordingly. If the bat is not moving and the ball hits it, rule nothing. This is not new. From your other posts, I have assumed you are not an internet umpire - sounds like you work JUCO and HS, as well as ASA. It's completely inconceivable to me that this has not been discussed ad nauseum in nearly every clinic you've attended. I've probably seen this explained upward of 40 times. But if it turns out you are an internet umpire (this applies to any of you that are - not just talking to Manny here). For God's sake, if Mike or Steve tells you something --- BELIEVE IT. You're not going to get a more correct response than from them ... and that includes the vast majority of your clinicians.
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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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24. HITTING THE BALL A SECOND TIME.
When considering the act of a batter hitting the pitched ball a second time, umpires should place the act into one of three categories. A. If the bat is in the hands of the batter when the ball comes in contact with bat, and the batter is in the batter's box, it is a foul ball. If, when the bat contacts the ball a batter's entire foot is completely outside the 122 RULES SUPPLEMENT batter's box, the batter is out When in doubt, don't guess the batter out. Call a foul ball. B. If the bat is out of the batter's hands, dropped or thrown, and it hits the ball a second time in fair territory, the ball is dead and the batter-runner is out. However, if the BALL hits the bat on the ground, the batter is not out and the umpire must then determine whether the ball is fair or foul based on the fair / foul rule. If the ball rolls against the bat in fair territory, the ball remains live. If the ball stops or is touched in fair territory, it is a fair ball. If the ball touches the bat in fair territory and then rolls to foul ground and stops, it is a foul ball. If the ball rolls against the bat in foul territory, it is a foul ball. C. If a batter swings at and misses the pitched ball but: 1. Accidentally hits it on the follow-through, or 2. Intentionally hits it on the second swing, or 3. Hits the ball after it bounces off the catcher or mitt / glove. The ball is dead, and all runners must return to the base they occupied prior to the pitch. (FP, SP with Stealing and 16" SP) In (2) and (3), if the act is intentional with runners on base, the batter is called out for interference. If this occurs on strike three in fast pitch, Rule 8, Section 2F has precedence. |
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As a general rule, I think it's a bad thing that there are interpretations that don't match the book. When I go to study the rule book to learn the bat/ball rules, I'm not going to see this, I'm going to see a rule about what hits what and then I have to remember that there's an interpretation that changes the rule. (Which makes this forum a good thing!) (And if Manny had just believed Mike about RS24, than neither of them would know that it doesn't in fact say that) |
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You want to be rule specific? Then 7.6.K.Exception.2 is not possible Show me a specific (and unfortunately this part has moved to ASA) rule which states the BR is out specifically for the ball and a discarded bat making contact in fair territory.
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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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As to the rest of what you just wrote, I'm not quite sure what you mean. 7-6-K Exception 2 reads: (in the 2008 book) When the batter drops the bat and the ball rolls against the bat in fair territory, and, in the umpire’s judgment, there was no intent to interfere with the ball. EFFECT: The ball is live. This is certainly possible and it's an exception to 7-6-K which is the answer to your other question. (unless that's moved) So I think mostly what I'm saying is I'm missing something about the whole recent flow of the conversation. |
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![]() ![]() I never said I didn't believe Mike. I'm simply asking for clarification for the benefit of all who post or lurk here, and wouldn't know who's a true authority and who's an internet umpire. The one thing I find different between baseball and softball when it comes to rule interpretations is how thoroughly exhaustive the community is on the small-white-ball side. There are volumes of authoritative documents--the MLB Umpires Manual, the Jaksa/Roder Manual, Wendelstedt's Rules and Interpretations Manual, Carl Childress's Baseball Rules Differences, just to name a few--that parse each and every word in the rule books to cover just about every conceivable situation that could take place on the big diamond. What happens when a pitched ball hits a bird? It's in the MLBUM. For some reason, the same is not true for softball. Yes, ASA has its rule supplement, and NFHS has a case book, to expand on the rules. And there are the web-based interpretations that come out on occasion on the ASA and NCAA websites. But for the most part, for those situations that are not specifically covered in written materials, we have to depend upon the Steves and Mikes of the world, and what might have been covered in clinics that tend to be nothing more than expert opinions of the clinician (which, in my experience, sometimes end up being wrong). If it really has been explained ad nauseum in numerous clinics, I'm sorry that I missed it. But if it's really something that has come up that often, then why not put it in writing in the rule books so it doesn't continually get asked? I'd be willing to bet one of those baseball documents does cover this scenario. ![]()
__________________
"Let's face it. Umpiring is not an easy or happy way to make a living. In the abuse they suffer, and the pay they get for it, you see an imbalance that can only be explained by their need to stay close to a game they can't resist." -- Bob Uecker |
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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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Quote:
![]()
__________________
"Let's face it. Umpiring is not an easy or happy way to make a living. In the abuse they suffer, and the pay they get for it, you see an imbalance that can only be explained by their need to stay close to a game they can't resist." -- Bob Uecker |
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