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Scoring Question
Edgy DC Sep 26 2005 09:18 AM |
A player gets hit by ball four. How is that scored?
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Yancy Street Gang Sep 26 2005 09:24 AM |
I think it's an HBP.
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Frayed Knot Sep 26 2005 09:33 AM |
Agreed.
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Edgy DC Sep 26 2005 09:56 AM |
I guess so, if only technically because the pitch wouln't be called ball four until it reaches the catcher. If the ump notices the batsman hit before then, he'll call that, and the ball/strike call becomes a moot point.
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metirish Sep 26 2005 10:00 AM |
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From the rule book...
http://www.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/mlb/official_info/official_rules/official_scorer_10.jsp
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Yancy Street Gang Sep 26 2005 10:10 AM |
Is the ball considered dead after it hits the batter, or is it still in play?
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Frayed Knot Sep 26 2005 10:12 AM |
Here's a scoring call for y'all - occured in yesterday's softball game:
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Frayed Knot Sep 26 2005 10:13 AM |
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HBP is always a dead ball.
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Yancy Street Gang Sep 26 2005 10:15 AM |
That's what I thought.
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MFS62 Sep 26 2005 10:33 AM |
Here's a true softball story from the playbook of the "sneaky bastard, let's bend the rules" folks.
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Yancy Street Gang Sep 26 2005 10:36 AM |
Fiendishly clever.
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metirish Sep 26 2005 10:38 AM |
Frayed Knot, in your game wouldn't that ball be called Foul?
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Frayed Knot Sep 26 2005 11:03 AM |
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Yes. An Infield Fly isn't an infield fly unless it's fair - think about it, the only reason for the rule is so the defense can't gain an unfair advantage over the offense (by intentionally dropping the ball and getting a DP) but that advantage doesn't exist on a foul. The proper call by the ump is; "Infield Fly ... IF FAIR" and then he'd simply call the ball that spun foul as 'strike 1' (or strike whatever). The confusing part is that the ball initially landed fair and - because of this - the ump made his 'IFR' call too soon and then stuck with it. My guys benefitted but it suxx when the umps don't know the rules. MFS'62: I know there are no balks in softball but at the same time there are rules which require that the pitcher maintain a continuous delivery w/o stops & starts or herky-jerky dance-steps in between. Rules differ between leagues (since the runners can move in your example this sounds like a fast-pitch or modified pitch league) but in my mind this should have been a 'no-pitch' call and the runners returned to their bases.
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Edgy DC Sep 26 2005 12:01 PM |
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This counts big time in Met history, as Mookie Wilson dancing away from a ball heading at his lower legs allowed the tying run to score on a wild pitch, while a a hit batsman would have merely put Mookie on and advanced winning-run Ray Knight to second, while leaving the game up to the next guy (Howard Johnson). Did they have a junky lefty available to face Johnson?
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