quote:
Originally posted by RedSoxFan21:
Interesting, gotta give you that one, it clearly says "being picked off base" without necessarily being out.
That certainly opens up the interpretation role of the Official Scorer. Was the runner going anyway and the pitcher didn't know other than to be attempting a pick-off? Or does the runner have to make a move back to the bag before taking off?
I have scored it as either an Attempted PickOff or a Stolen Base. Likewise if he is out at the base he is trying to steal, I have considered it a Caught Stealing.
Not that they are necessarily right, but this is the way the folks at Gamechanger offer the options too.
No problem! I’ve learned a whole lot about scoring by being forced to read the rules. Like I said at 1st, I’m not trying to get anyone to score the way I do, and I’m certainly not gonna change the way I do it.
Here’s another one we had happen on Tuesday. We had a runner on 1st, and he got caught leaning. Once he knew he was likely dead meat, he took off for 2nd. F3 threw to F6, and as the ball was going to him, the runner stopped and headed back toward 1st. When he saw the ball get thrown back to F3, he stopped and headed back to 2nd. Of course the 3rd base coach was screaming instructions, and when the ball got away from the F3, he screamed to go on to 2nd and slide.
I scored it a PO with a SB, but their scorer scored it an E3. We talked about it for a bit, and I said I’d look it up later to be sure, and talk to their coach about the next day, because they were the official book. Here’s what I found and presented to the coach on Wednesday.
OBR 10.12 ERRORS
(a) The official scorer shall charge an error against any fielder:
(5) whose wild throw permits a runner to reach a base safely, when in the scorer’s judgment a good throw would have put out the runner, unless such wild throw is made attempting to prevent a stolen base;I let him read it and make the final call. He said he’d never read that before, but agreed with me that that was certainly the purpose of making the throw, and he was going to change it.
There’s a lot of things in the rules about runners advancing bases that are interesting and informative, and that aren’t just simple things everyone knows.