quote:
Originally posted by baseballdad13:
If a fielder goes over ten to fifteen steps and misses the ball its an error? What if he runs twenty to thirty steps and ball bounces off his glove?
Question: How far do you have to go for it to be considered a hit when fielder cannot make the play?
I have seen hits where fielder got there just didn't make the catch and other times when fielder was late, ball dropped and they called an error.
I know people will say its the official scorers judgment on if it was considered a routine play (catchable ball or not).
My left fielder turned around to chase line drive fly ball, cleats got stuck in grass, pulled out continued to ball path, goes over head but touches glove and they called it an error. It was a good hit but again he didn't travel too far to get there..Yeah he would have been right there if not for a quick slip..Who knows for sure?
Its not whether the scorer thinks is a routine play or how far the fielder had to go to make the play. The standard is
ORDINARY EFFORT.
This is easily the rule I’ve posted more than any other, and the one most often misapplied and/or misunderstood.
BOR 2.00 - ORDINARY EFFORT is the effort that a fielder of average skill at a position in that league or classification of leagues should exhibit on a play, with due consideration given to the condition of the field and weather conditions.
Rule 2.00 (Ordinary Effort) Comment: This standard, called for several times in the Official Scoring Rules (e.g., Rules 10.05(a)(3), 10.05(a)(4), 10.05(a)(6), 10.05(b)(3) (Base Hits); 10.08(b) (Sacrifices); 10.12(a)(1) Comment, 10.12(d)(2) (Errors); and 10.13(a), 10.13(b) (Wild Pitches and
Passed Balls)) and in the Official Baseball Rules (e.g., Rule 2.00 (Infield Fly)), is an objective standard in regard to any particular fielder. In other words, even if a fielder makes his best effort, if that effort falls short of what an average fielder at that position in that league would have made in a situation, the official scorer should charge that fielder with an error.The difficulty is, many scorers don’t have a good idea of what the “average” player’s abilities are for the game they’re scoring. Here’s the way its SUPPOSED to work.
Let’s say you’re scoring a game in our league. All of the teams are large schools(DI), and in our area there are only 3 leagues with 18 teams in them, and they’re all fairly equal when it comes to the quality of players. So, when you’re scoring a game where two of those teams is laying each other, its fair to say the average player at any given position will likely be better than the average player from a DVII team.
The result is, when you score a game with 2 of the big boys playing, you’re supposed to be a bit tougher scoring plays than if one of the teams was a tiny school. The same thing goes for scoring a JV game. When I score a JV game, the 1st thing I do is try to get my mid ready to see play that isn’t up to Varsity standards, which by definition its not. So a ball I’d mark as an E for a big school V game might be marked as a hit in a JV game.
Don’t feel bad if you have trouble with this concept. Our V coach has been a HDHVC for more than 20 years now, and he still thinks it’s the quality of the player trying to make the play that determines whether or not something’s a hit or an error. It’s the play. Would the AVG player at that position have made it?