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The infield Fly
I thought maybe the discussion concerning the IF fly call would be better suited for its own thread. Perhaps a mod could move the posts in the scoreboard thread here and free the thread from being dominated by discussion of the call.
To add some variety to the discussion, let me ask this of the board: Why exactly do we need a rule to protect the runners from a double play? We don't have a rule to protect them on a ground ball. If a batter hits a weak pop fly in that situation, it seems like a pretty massive fail to me, so why would rewarding the defense with a DP be so horrible? |
Yes the batter failed. That's why he's automatically out. But the rule protects runners from having to do something (run) they otherwise would choose not to do, or at least choose to do at their own risk.
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Re: The infield Fly
I completely agree with Mth123. With runners in base, don't pop the ball up, If you do, it can become a double play. We should have rules that punish players for popping the ball up with runners on base. It also makes the game more interesting, as fielders and runners would have to decide what to do in each situation. I say get rid of it.
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I think the infield fly rule is 100% necessary. Repealing the rule would lead to a double play on most infield pop ups. The defense let's it drop and they get a double play ; they catch it and they double up the runner who strayed too far. The rule wasn't the problem last night; the application was. Repealing a rule based on one misapplication is a knee jerk reaction.
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Re: The infield Fly
I get where you're coming from, mth123. Repealing the rule would certainly make pop flies very exciting plays, where fielders and runners have to make spit-second decisions (catch/don't catch, run/don't run).
Not sure whether it would be better or worse, but certainly not routine! |
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And while the primary reason for this thread was because the discussion was cluttering the scoreboard thread and made it unreadable, the question posed is not about misapplication of the rule or really about last night's game at all (where the losing team deserved to lose for making errors and not hitting with runners in scoring position and certainly should not have been bailed out by hitting a pop fly with men on base). My question is why the defense shouldn't get a DP on a pop-up. What makes getting a double play on a ground ball such a great job by the pitcher but on a pop-up the runners are protected? Seems to me that in most situations getting a pop fly is an even better outcome than getting a ground ball (which have a better chance of going through) so why limit the reward for the defense doing its job and limit the penalty for the offense failing? The whole concept seems misguided to me. |
Re: The infield Fly
Without the rule would lead to a lot of bunting when you have two runners on, as teams wouldn't want to risk the now increased chance of a double play.
Put your hand up if you want more bunting. |
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Say you are a reliever coming in with runners on first and second and you induce a pop-up, why should the reward be limited to one out? If you induced a ground ball you'd have a chance to get two outs, why only one for a pop fly? A pop-up is a massive fail. Don't want to hit intro a DP there? Get the ball out of the IF. |
Re: The infield Fly
:p
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But I've noticed over the years that INFIELD fly has become a misnomer. Umpires call infield fly on pop ups into the shorter part of the outfield. Last night's fly ball was something that Holliday could have fielded. It wasn't an INFIELD fly at all, using the normal definition of the word. What you MAY see is a new interpretation of the infield fly rule, limiting it to balls popped up within a very specific area - the infield and maybe a few feet beyond. I agree with mth to this extent - the infield fly rule should be narrowly interpreted. If you call infield fly on virtually anything hit in the air, you've diminished the game by providing too broadly for an automatic out. |
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I'm not really strongly for the rule being repealed (but I wouldn't be strongly opposed either), just wanted to see the discussion. Now I'm the one getting redundant so I'll leave it to the rest of you to discuss or let the topic die. |
Re: The infield Fly
Seems like "ordinary effort" was the key to last night's call. The infielder was pretty much standing under the ball (making it an infield fly with ordinary effort), then gave way, thinking the outfielder had it. If the same infielder had let it drop to try for a double play, would it have been more obviously an infield fly?
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