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re: It’s interference. With visual evidence and the rule

Posted on 5/11/24 at 9:17 am to
Posted by lsupride87
Member since Dec 2007
96659 posts
Posted on 5/11/24 at 9:17 am to
quote:

The rule, as I read it, simply says, there does NOT need to be contact with anyone or anything for the rule to be called.
It says the throw must be interfered with though

Milazzo threw to the right of the bag and the throw still wasn’t interfered with. If it’s thrown right at the bag or left of the bag it’s even further from being interfered with

quote:

the fact that the runner is inside the foul line, beyond the halfway mark and the fact that the fielder needed to make the throw on THAT SIDE of the bag, regardless of where the ball ends up, the call should be made.


You simply aren’t reading the rule. It’s very clear

quote:

NCAA Rule 7, Section 11 (p) : In running the last half of the distance from home plate to first base while the ball is being fielded to first base, the batter-runner runs outside the 3-foot restraining line or inside the foul line and, in so doing, interferes with the fielder taking the throw at first base, except that the batter may go outside these lines to avoid a fielder attempting to field a batted ball
This post was edited on 5/11/24 at 9:19 am
Posted by ChiefCornerstone
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2022
218 posts
Posted on 5/11/24 at 9:58 am to
quote:

You simply aren’t reading the rule. It’s very clear

Oh, I absolutely read it. But, I kept reading since, how does one define "interference"? The explanation in the article was very clear. At the CWS, the ruling is made in the favor of the DEFENSE (emphasis added) in the majority of the cases. Why?

Well, I take that to mean, how does the umpire "know" that the runner running inside the line isn't interfering with the fielder's line of sight, ability to throw etc. Most everyone is reading the rule as being black and white. It isn't. The article clearly states there is some subjectivity to the rule and that, at the CWS, the umpires almost always rule in favor of the defense.

From the article itself:
"Contact is not necessary between the runner and the fielder, but it certainly makes it a more obvious call for the umpires. The umpire may simply judge that the fielder did not have an opportunity to catch the ball as a result of the potential collision. It is generally accepted that a throw must be catchable in order to invoke this penalty, but umpires will side with the defense in this judgement more often than not if the runner was illegal running up the lane. The NCAA rule adds a clause which does not exist in the MLB rule book (Rule 5.09 (a) (11)) or the NFHS book ( Rule 8 Section 4 Article 1 (g)) which is “hinders or alters the throw of a fielder.” As a result, in NCAA a non-catchable throw could be more easily adjudged as interference by an umpire who believes that the position of the runner prevented or altered the fielder from making a catchable throw."
This post was edited on 5/11/24 at 10:02 am
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