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Doing some research in preparation for our tournament in March and have noticed that on the USSSA tournament pages the innings pitched logs are only kept for teams up to but NOT including the championship games. 

 

Does this mean the final does not count in the overall 8 inning for the weekend limit?

Or is it laid out with the coaches and umpires before the championship game that these pitchers on each team have "x" # of innings remaining to hit their 8 and that is all they can go in the final?

 

Just wondering after watching that 12u final in Miami Super where the two teams in the finals dueled to a 1-0 final in 11 innings and wondering how after playing 6 previous games they had enough kids to pitch that effectively through the tournament.  I would think that at a point quickly after the regulation innings of that game the pitching staff would have been spent and kids with limited experience would have entered and the score would have been lopsided for at least one half of an inning.

 

Anyone familiar with championship play in USSSA tournaments (or any pitch count regulated ones I guess) that can share anything on this??

 

Thanks in advance.

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Hey Coach,

I work some tourneys for another sanction who does the same.  Yes, the final game counts as it applies to IP rules.  And yes, each of the last two teams knows (if they care to) who has how many innings left going into the final.  So, there is nothing to be gained by posting the IP's from the final after the fact.  IP's are posted during the course of the tourney as a running talley for the convenience of the participants during the event.

That 12U Miami Super NIT had some very strong teams with very deep pitching.  The top teams in Florida, SoCal, Texas and Georgia can be very deep.  My son's team for example, which played in NorCal this past weekend, used 9 pitchers.  If you haven't played a tournament in the south you should, it's a great experience of amazing baseball.

Originally Posted by Smitty28:

That 12U Miami Super NIT had some very strong teams with very deep pitching.  The top teams in Florida, SoCal, Texas and Georgia can be very deep.  My son's team for example, which played in NorCal this past weekend, used 9 pitchers.  If you haven't played a tournament in the south you should, it's a great experience of amazing baseball.

Were coming in March to Atlanta SNIT, and we have what I would think is good pitching depth, we'll see if we can run with the big (southern) dogs!!

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