What everything revolves around about how a given play is scored as far as a hit or an error goes, is what the scorer’s personal definition of “ORDINARY EFFORT” is, and believe me, everyone has one and they’re all different in some manner.
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A few years back MLB decided it was finally time to at least try to put some kind of definition into OBR to give scorers at least some direction about what it wanted ordinary effort to be. When I first saw the release from MLB and read the rule, I thought “WOW”, this is gonna revolutionize amateur baseball scoring! Unfortunately though, neither NCAA nor NFHS has felt the need to put that definition in its rule book, and as far as I know, no other organization has either.
That doesn’t bother many experienced SKs, but it really wreaks havoc among coach’s helpers in the dugout, volunteer parents who only do it because they want to see Jr’s batting average and no one else will keep score, or just regular fans who have their own idea about when something has been done correctly, and apply it to what takes place on the ball field.
Without a real understanding of what OE means, its inevitable that people believe an error is an error, no matter what the level of ball being played, and if you think about it, that’s where most scoring issues about hits and errors lie. Likely the best example of how important it is, is in HSB. At one time, I believed like everyone else that a HS game was a HS game. But when I actually began scoring them, it didn’t take long to figger out that scoring a Fr game was not the same as a V game, or that a V game between two large school teams was not the same as scoring a game where the teams were in a small school division.
So, I just wish the definition would get put in the book. That would really make a difference to those who actually took the time to read the thing.
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