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From an association quiz
We had the following situation on a test in our association a couple weeks ago. How would you rule.
R1 on 2nd, R2 on first, 1 out, B4 hits a high pop fly that lands in foul territory between home and first base then kicks (untouched) into fair territory. F2 fields the ball and throws to F3 who tags R2 as they are standing off the base. We had a big discussion about one aspect of this play. Would you call an infield fly on this play? (Edit: changed intentional to infield) My argument is that it could be an intentional fly situation given that 1) It was a high pop fly on the play. In my opinion, without seeing the play, a high pop fly near a foul line in a high school game should be able to be caught with reasonable effort. 2) The ball ended up in fair territory, even though it hit in foul territory, which means it is a fair ball, thus being eligible for the infield fly rule given the way the rule is worded. That would make this play a double play with the out on an infield fly being #2 and an out on the tag being the third out. This is a situation where no matter what, a coach is going to be upset. The defensive coach will want both outs, the out on R2 who was tagged while off the base and the out for the infield fly. The offensive coach is going to be arguing that the only out should be R2 who was tagged off base, and that B4 (who we assume advanced to first while the high pop fly was in the air) should be safe on the play. Last edited by chapmaja; Tue Apr 22, 2014 at 10:42pm. Reason: incorrect word usage |
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Intentional Fly?
Cutting through the irrelevant stuff, the answer to your question is that YES, the umpire can (and very likely should, in this case) retroactively rule an INFIELD fly and place runners accordingly. Umpires should have called it at its apex (IFF if Fair), but having failed to do so they MUST fix this error, call BR out, and leave the runners on 1st and 2nd. NO, you should not allow a double play here, as the runner only advanced because of the umpire's error in not calling it an IFF when he was supposed to.
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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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To be more specific, the intent of the infield fly rule is to protect against a cheap double play resulting from runners being forced. Not so much against runners too stupid to stay on a base on a fair batted ball. Without seeing the exact play, and determining that the runner was in jeopardy for the umpire failing to call the IFR (meaning, she is now running to second thinking she is forced), as opposed to a runner too stupid to know this is a fair ball, live ball, and she is in jeopardy standing off the base, I am thinking I probably DO have a double play, based on the post "standing off the base".
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Steve ASA/ISF/NCAA/NFHS/PGF |
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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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Now, as for the situation if the umpire does not make the call initially. The proper ruling, which I just found in the casebook is: B4 is out on an infield fly, even if it is not called initially the batter is out. Also, R2 is out for being tagged while off the base. This is from the casebook play on page 15, (2.30 Situation B) Ultimately it is up to the offensive team to know the situation. I can understand the idea of not counting the double play, but the proper situation for the offense in this case is to stay on the base. If no infield fly is rule, R2 is out when they are tagged standing on the base (force out). If the IFR is in play, they are safe while standing on first base, and the Batter is out on the IFR. The only bad option is to stand off the base, allowing yourself to be tagged out. |
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You didn't say it was called at all. If it WAS called, it changes the scenario completely. Including the fact that it was called is as important as mentioning a runner was tagged out - it's critical to the situation.
Omitting relevant information is not going to get you the answer you're looking for, most of the time. If IFF was called, then you have a double play, and really don't have anything to discuss. Pretty straightforward in that case and coaches have nothing to argue about either.
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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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Double play whether called or not.....
If we don't call an in field fly on a ball hit above the shortstop in this scenario, we would still have a dp.....this scenario is no different....
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Go ugly early, avoid the rush !!!! |
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The runner who is tagged while off base is out and the batter runner is out on the IFR. It is still the responsibility of the offensive team to know the situation. There is no way a runner tagged out when off base is put back on the base because the umpires did not call the IFR. |
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Tom |
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Tom |
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I get that. And IFF was not called. Then chap said, "I did not say anything about when the IFR was called," - implying that it WAS called. Which, despite chap's insistence, CAN change the situation.
If the original scenario was presented on a test, but it said IFF was called... there would be nothing to discuss. The question would be easy. The DP would be obvious - and no coach with a quarter of a brain would complain. IFF not called is the CRUX of this discussion. It brings into play the concern that the lack of call put someone at jeopardy - and if so, we must protect them. I do agree that if the runner is just wandering off base for no apparent reason (and not confused by the lack of IFF call, running, and then trying to return, or something like that), you probably still have a double play.
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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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I certainly hope that was not a test consideration.
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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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