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A friend posed this play to me and I am not sure I am correct and of course I would like some other thoughts and rulings.
Runner on First, One out. Ball hit to deep center and R1 takes off. CF makes Willie Mays catch. R1 is between 2nd and third when CF fires the ball back to first base. CF's cannon of an arm throws the ball into dead ball territory before R1 can return for the tag up. What is the Award? A. Third base after going back to First and re-tagging. B. Home after going back to First and re-tagging.
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R.Vietti |
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The runner needs to complete their base running responsibilities first. Therefore, the last base legally touched at the time of the throw would be first. The runner gets third assuming they touched second while coming back to first to tag up. I hope I'm not wrong on this.
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"If you want something that is fair in life, hit a ball between first and third base." John Palko Pittsburgh, PA |
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ASA POE describes this play almost exactly and says that the runner is awarded home. The reason is the award to the runner is dictated by where they are located at the time of the throw. Hence the award to home. They still need to fulfill their baserunning responsibilites before they are awarded the bases. The only part of the POE I am not sure about is that they also say that the runner is between 1st and 2nd when the ball goes into dead ball territory.
My follow up to this post is: If R1 is not between first and second when the ball goes out of bounds are they still awarded home?
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R.Vietti |
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You say the reason for awarding the runner home is because the runner last touched second. OK, I guess according to the rule, that's correct. My beef is, and I'm not disagreeing with you Rick, is that the runner didn't LEGALLY have second base. The runner legally held first. After completing their base running responsiblities, why do they still get home? "Two bases from the last base touched at the time of the throw..." according to rule. How about a possible rewording of POE 37 to "Two base from the last base LEGALLY touched at the time of the throw..."? This eliminates the need for the exception for POE 37 Objections? Comments? Potential arguments?
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"If you want something that is fair in life, hit a ball between first and third base." John Palko Pittsburgh, PA |
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ASA 8.5 RUNNERS ARE ENTITLED TO ADVANCE WITHOUT LIABILITY TO BE PUT OUT: G. When the ball is in play and is overthrown (beyond the boundary liens) of is blocked. EFFECT: All runners will be awarded two bases, and the award will be governed by the positions of the runners when the ball left the fielder's hand. Runners may return to touch a missed base or base left too soon. If two runners are between the same bases, the award is based on the position of the lead runner. Once a base runner advances to and passes the next awarded base, the runner may no longer return to touch any missed base or any base left too soon. There are four exceptions, but none have to do with the subject matter. The "last base touched" phrase is in the POE to make it easier for some to understand. Apparently, in this case, it is causing confusion. Remember, in ASA, once a runner passes a base, they are considered to have touched that base. Since a base left too soon is an appeal, the umpire cannot award bases and then explain it to the teams that the reason is because s/he knows the runner left too soon.
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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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My assumption is that the ball remains dead during the time R1 is headed back to 1st and that there is no way for the umpire or defense to get back to live ball status and jeopardize the runner.
Please be sure to recognize that "when the ball goes into dead ball territory" is not relevant. Then we have NFHS. As I understand NFHS, the runner(s) can not return past a base after the ball is dead, so in this case R1 could only go back to 2nd, not be able to tag up and be out on appeal, even if awarded home.
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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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As Mike said... the award in ASA is based on where the runner was at the time of the throw no matter how they got there!
If they are not there "legally" - i.e. they missed a base or left early, they must rectify that before advancing on the award. If they advance one base on the award before retouching, then they may not return to retouch. However, the defense must still appeal to get the out.
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Tom |
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Gentlemen, thank you for making this clear to me now.
It doesn't matter if the runner illegally obtained a base, they are considered to have it. From what Mike said, it doesn't even matter what base they had, it matters where they were on the basepaths. I get it now. Once again, thanks.
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"If you want something that is fair in life, hit a ball between first and third base." John Palko Pittsburgh, PA |
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One part of the POE play is now irrelevant and should be removed: the fact that the runner is between 2B and 1B when the ball goes out of play.
Before ASA changed their rule (for the 2002 season), if the runner was past 2B when the ball went into DBT, then he was not permitted to return to touch 1B (as in Fed). Therefore, for the POE they had to devise a play in which the runner was between 2B and 3B when the ball was thrown, but between 2B and 1B when it went into DBT. Now a runner can return to touch a base left too soon even if he is beyond the "next" base, as long as he initiates his return before the award is made. That part was clarified for 2003, if the ambiguous wording ASA used can be considered clarification. [Edited by greymule on Aug 6th, 2003 at 03:42 PM]
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greymule More whiskey—and fresh horses for my men! Roll Tide! |
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C-1: "Please be sure to recognize that "when the ball goes into dead ball territory" is not relevant."
Not relevent to what? Ball going out directly because of a throw? Agreed. But there are several situations where awards are made from the base obtained at the time the ball went out of play." You need to be a little more specific so you don't confuse the people that are trying to learn. WMB |
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The ones I thought of after WMB's comment are
- carried by a fielder - lost by a fielder making a play - an out after obstruction
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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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