During contiuation, if a player rounds first and makes an agressive move towards second, but then goes immediatley back to first, is she out? I had an umpire call this on me and I can't seem to find his interpretation of this rule anywhere. It wasn't the lookback rule because she wasn't dancing around. She rounded first agressively, but then went directlty back to first. He told me that if she made an agressive move on continuation she has to go to 2nd. Anyone that has insight, it would be helpful. Thanks
Why would this be a LBR violation? Does her falling not count as her one stop, and then decide to go back?we had a player once the was on LBR with ball in circle, started to go to 2b, hooked her spikes together and ended up falling down and starting back to 1b. LBR violation, runner out. I think entire team laughed for the balance of the weekend.
Can you imagine the stories the umpire are telling about the silly stuff we see coaches and parents do?It's amazing that almost every weekend has some "ump" story.
Rules aren't that hard. Some study, some games, and some more reading of rule applications. Look up the Baseball myth articles too.
Good luck. No one is perfect.
stopped, started to go to 2b, tripped , fell, went back to 1b. when she was stopped and decided to go to 2b, that was the decision, going back to 1b with no play made got the LBR violation.Why would this be a LBR violation? Does her falling not count as her one stop, and then decide to go back?
Missed the first stop. Got it.stopped, started to go to 2b, tripped , fell, went back to 1b. when she was stopped and decided to go to 2b, that was the decision, going back to 1b with no play made got the LBR violation.
stopped, started to go to 2b, tripped , fell, went back to 1b. when she was stopped and decided to go to 2b, that was the decision, going back to 1b with no play made got the LBR violation.
It's amazing that almost every weekend has some "ump" story.
Rules aren't that hard. Some study, some games, and some more reading of rule applications. Look up the Baseball myth articles too.
Good luck. No one is perfect.