because if you watch the play the runner actually steps back towards 2nd.. by rule he needs to retouch 3rd to advance.. the obstruction award is only for the next base..The home plate ump immediately pointed to the third base ump and ruled safe. Why would the runner be awarded a base he has already achieved?
because if you watch the play the runner actually steps back towards 2nd.. by rule he needs to retouch 3rd to advance.. the obstruction award is only for the next base..
and you see obstruction calls ignored every week on plays at 2nd during steals. i dont recall more than 1-2 a SS or 2nd basemen getting ruled for not letting a runner advance to 3rd.
yeah there is a rule.. and yeah there was contact. what if the contact knocks middlebrook out and he is lieing there and the runner trips over him. you going to rule an unconscious player obstructed someone. the rule is designed to protect the runner not reward the runner for making running mistakes.
Well he's benched for tonight... I'm a huge Sox fan... unbelievably frustrating finish, can't wait for game 4 tonightBoston's catcher threw the ball into left field with the game winning run on 3rd in the bottom of the 9th. Instead of crying about the umps, Boston fans should focus on that.
sure call the obstruction.. he gets third base"
whether the runner meant to run towards 2nd or not he did.. he got up to a step towards 2nd,. that changes his base bath and puts the fielder into play. and the umps can over rule any rule they want if they feel its not in the spirit of the game.. what if Criag takes off towards the mound and runs into the pitcher? is that obstruction?
Middlebrook raised his legs up twice. The second time clearly impeded the runner (and IMO was intentional) and made the call easy for the umpire. It was obvious to most viewers with no particular rooting interest. I love how Sox fans and Boston media are calling for the rule to be changed today since it adversely affected their team. They can now add this play to their persecution complex and moan about it for the next 50 years.once the player establishes third base he then creates his baseline to home. by stepping back to 2nd he now needs to retouch third.. the replay shows the 3rd basemen out of the intended baseline. the runner cant redirect to a new line that puts a fielder in his way. you see it all the time in run downs with runners trying to reach out and touch fielders and change their baselines, contact does not mean obstruction.. how far away does ,middlebrook have to be.. what he fell 10 ft away and craig runs back and trip over him..
No, that's running out of the base path.what if Criag takes off towards the mound and runs into the pitcher? is that obstruction?
It was a bizarre play, that's for sure. It's the first time I've ever seen a player touch a base and then wind up in the preceding base path - I'm sure it's happened before but I've never seen it. His body was a good two feet off third base on the second base side. I'd like to know what the rules of baseball are regarding this, if there's a rule/rules about it at all. Does he have to retouch third base? That question is more important than the obstruction call.
If he does he should be ruled out. If he doesn't my follow up question is: since the runner was not in the base path between third and home AND the fielder was not obstructing the runner between those two bases, is it still considered obstruction? If it isn't they should've just played on. Of course, there's no question the fielder obstructed the runner on the latter's path home.
Oh, and I'm not a Red Sox fan, I'm a fan of getting things right and being fair.
Middlebrook raised his legs up twice. The second time clearly impeded the runner (and IMO was intentional) and made the call easy for the umpire. It was obvious to most viewers with no particular rooting interest. I love how Sox fans and Boston media are calling for the rule to be changed today since it adversely affected their team. They can now add this play to their persecution complex and moan about it for the next 50 years.
I think that's "picking fly out of pepper." The right call was made regardless of the details, and I'll bet that's what most sports fans want.
And it's barely 50 degrees , so why is Buchholz' hair all wet?
Answer: it's not wet from sweat, it's full of gel. And if anyone's noticed besides me, he's gone with his pitching hand from his hair to his glove several times already tonight. Can anyone guess what else is in his glove?![]()
So silly. A big league hitter knows when a ball is doctored immediately. Not one card even asked to have the ball looked at.And it's barely 50 degrees , so why is Buchholz' hair all wet?
Answer: it's not wet from sweat, it's full of gel. And if anyone's noticed besides me, he's gone with his pitching hand from his hair to his glove several times already tonight. Can anyone guess what else is in his glove?![]()
because if you watch the play the runner actually steps back towards 2nd.. by rule he needs to retouch 3rd to advance.. the obstruction award is only for the next base..
and you see obstruction calls ignored every week on plays at 2nd during steals. i dont recall more than 1-2 a SS or 2nd basemen getting ruled for not letting a runner advance to 3rd.
yeah there is a rule.. and yeah there was contact. what if the contact knocks middlebrook out and he is lieing there and the runner trips over him. you going to rule an unconscious player obstructed someone. the rule is designed to protect the runner not reward the runner for making running mistakes.
Actually, if you listened to the bit about Joe Torre, the rule will be looked at and will likely be changed because most sports fans (read everyone but Yankee fans - haters gonna hate) realized it's a stupid rule if there is no intent. I think it could be argued Middlebrooks intended to help out with his feet, but the rule doesn't care, as it stands right now.
Okay, so you know I'm a huge Sox fan and I was asking the same question. He did this far too often to be overlooked, although I guess he could have been sweating.
Either way, it's not like he had great stuff that was moving all over the place. He got lucky more often than not.
And the rule will be changed to allow an ump to determine intent. As noted above, a runner shouldn't be rewarded just because a guy in lying flat on his face unconscious.
so if a player is stealing slides into 2nd and slides past the bag and then realizes the ball was hit and caught he needs to go back to first does he just skip touching the bag because he didn't mean to go past it?you're really grasping at straws. you have to be a sox fan - because it was a clear call. And his "step back towards 2nd" is a joke.
Imagine if they didn't call the obstruction and then the sox won. The cardinals would have with out a doubt suffered injustice. The sox, in this case, did not. They only suffered a bizarre ending. Case closed.
Determine "intent?" I dunno VT, a judge, two lawyers and 12 jurors struggle trying to do that. And they can have as long as they want. If the pitcher intends to throw a strike and misses, it's a ball regardless. The way I see that play is that it's no different than when, after bunting a ball down the first base line, the batter runs inside the base line interfering with the throw. It doesn't matter whether he "intended" to do so, he did. Period. And he's out. Period.
That being said, there's no other reason for the third baseman to have raised his legs - twice - like that.