@MANCHESTER UNITED what are you doing? Soccer is genuinely my favorite sport, but I'm confused on what you're trying to do. Are you trying to get people to hate both you and soccer? Because that's all that's going to happen
T - Squared Well, what I was thinking wasn’t the grand slam (though why go through the motion of a fake swing, and having everyone run the bases. They no longer require the international walk require four actual pitches, and they are trying to shorten the game. Just add four runs and move on to the next batter) but there were two instances where the pitcher pitches the ball into the ground. Now with runners on base, that’s usually a balk. The one with the sound guy was not so confusing - he caused the pitcher to get distracted, so - no call. But in another one, there were runners in motion, and we never get to see the outcome after the runner on third reaches home. But all other runners would advance, and I am guessing that’s what happened, but the clip ends at that point, so we don’t see the outcome. The first one, where the batter just freezes, and is out on a called strike, seems less confusing, though it baffled the broadcasters. Some hitters are “guess hitters” (for lack of a better term), by which I mean they tend to guess what kind of pitch is coming. This batter just guessed wrong, and was fooled by the pitch. He knew it, and just headed back to the dugout. Batters get a fraction of a second to decide whether or not to swing. And pitchers obviously are trying to fool them. In this case, the pitcher threw a different pitch than the batter was expecting. And the batter knew it. He froze. Today, pro teams scout each other so closely, using video (from previous games) and even computers to see where opposing hitters strong points and weak points are (high, low, inside, outside). Batters will try to figure out what kind of pitches, and locations, in different circumstances. So the pitcher and batter are each trying to outsmart each other. The pitcher outsmarted the batter in that first clip. The batter just wasn’t expecting that pitch.
I was thinking of the scene in "Major League" where Jake hits the phantom homer in the empty ball park, does the high five with nobody, and Wild Thing and Willie Hayes comment on how far he hit it and what pitch it was.
The last three: The pitcher spiking the pitch, scoring the runner--Even if they got the throw home to tag the runner, he scores. A wild pitch that never reaches the foul line is a balk. The second to last play (Ben Gamel)--simply being in fair territory after overrunning first is not a reason to be called out. It is a judgment call as to whether he actually turned to run to second, versus simply slowing down to go back to first. The last play--the umpire raised his hands and moved them outward in the classic "foul ball" signal prior to pointing fair. He killed the play. In that situation, also, if the ball hit the batter's hands, it's a dead ball strike (no, the hands are NOT part of the bat).
Third play. It's a dead ball for sure but only a strike if an attempt to swing was made. Otherwise it is a hit batsman because, as you correctly said, the hand is never part of the bat. In this example, he was squared to bunt so if the ball hit his hand instead of the bat it would be a dead ball strike.
The second to last one - being in fair territory after you overrun first is very much a... live player i guess you would call it... no judgement call there at all
The last play is clearly a live ball. I will take you thru it step by step. You hear the ball hit the bat, in replays you see the ball hit the bat, not his hand. The ball hits home plate yes, but then rolls fair. (Ellis picks it up in fair territory. The ball may have gone behind the plate at some point, but it never stopped, it went back into the field a play, making it fair) The umpire does make the "foul ball" motion, however, that doesn't automatically "kill the play." He then later makes the fair ball motion and the Dodgers turn the triple play. If anything it looks like he is moving backwords trying to stay out of the way, not to call it foul. Don't blame the Dodgers for actually taking advantage of the fact that NONE of the Padres even try to advance. They just stayed put at their bases. That's THEIR fault. They should have tried to run, cause if it is foul, then they just return to their base anyways no harm. Poor baserunning all around. The ump is a bit at fault. But if he didn't call the play fair, seriously go watch the replay showing it go fair, then the Dodgers would be screwed. Either way, a team was gonna get screwed in that scenario, so getting the play call right on the field should be the priority to salvage the situation, and that's what they did.
@David Riedy Depends on the wording of the rule. I know for softball (I don't do baseball), I would not rule this an attempt to advance. However I think MLB's rules do specify this as an attempt to advance. I recall an issue with Puig and the Dodgers a few years ago similar to this and he was called out.
In the last clip the plate umpire raised his hands in a "where is the ball?" gesture and then raised them again in a "dead ball" gesture. That ball should have been declared dead.
None of these were confusing plays. If you are confused just ask and I'll explain. The only one that seemed legit is the play at 6:15 as the umpire put both his hands up and his body language is what is used when the play is dead either from a foul ball or a hit by pitch(basically a stop in play). He then looked down and pointed in fair territory to signal the ball was in play. You can see the head of the runner at 2B stopping and going back when he sees the hands go up. I'm sure the umpire threw his hands up as a "I'm not in the way/getting out of the way" gesture however it should have not been ruled the way it was. I'm not an umpire nor do I have extensive rule knowledge to know what the actual outcome should have been (no pitch/foul ball) but the umps hands went up which signals a stoppage in play, runners should not have been punished. If you are wondering about the guy that swung at no pitch and ran the bases... because he was called out on the play going back to 1B he left the bases... they did the replay and the hit was ruled a HR because it hit the yellow (or above) line. So legally in baseball you must touch all the bases. So they had him go back and start over with his swing and round the bases. In short the ruling was they had to go back and "replay" the at bat and do the corrective course of action.
thegreatcerebral I agree, the runners should not be punished for the ump using wrong sign language and then reversing his own calls. The ump should be punished for mis-use of sign language and do 100 push-ups. 🤣
Alex Pauli the first clip... I don’t know the history of that play but it looks like the batter was pissed at something and he did that as a way to show his unhappiness with either the strikezone or something that happened. That’s all I can come up with considering we don’t know the history.
What's funny about 5:19 is there's a few seconds of more confusion right at the end of the clip. There was one out at the start of the play and the batter (Rendon) was safe at first. You can see the umpire call it. After Werth was tagged out, they zoom in on Upton jogging in as if the inning's over, and the graphic even advances to three outs. At the last split second you see Upton pull up, because the umpires were probably signalling to everyone that there were still two outs, and Rendon was safe at first.
but the home plate umpire signaled dead ball.......twice........go back and watch the play. You can't call dead ball, then penalize the runners for not advancing.
Play at 6:11 I get called out on that for looking around to find the ball and being considered a live baserunner off a single trot I'm protesting the game. That's a terrible call
There was one unusual triple play some time ago that I cannot find now. All I remember is two of the umpires in that clip (Tim Tschida and Balking Bob - no, he didn’t eject anyone in that clip), and after Tschida went over the play with Davidson and the other umps, he wound up calling three outs on the play - runners on first, third, and home.
The red sox yankees clip at 4:57 should have resulted in a double play. Runner was put out at 2nd on the force and then interfered with a throw to first for the double play. By rule a runner put out can't interfere with a play.
Okay I think I figured it out. The people running the tv scoreboard thought it was a double play and not a trapped ball. That’s why it went from 1-3 outs. The ump called the batter safe at first. And only tagged the runner. The only player that left the field was the center fielder who trapped it trying to sell it as a catch.
After he ran through the bag, he turned left into fair territory. You are only safe if you turn towards foul territory after running through the bag; if you turn left/fair, then you are an active base runner (possibly heading to second base).
@@AndyLundeen, no that is wrong. A runner may turn left into fair territory as long as he returns immediately to first base and doesn't make a motion to advance to second. In the umpire's judgement, he made a move to second base.
@@alanhess9306 That is the key part of the ruling. In the umpires judgment. I personally would not have ruled that intent to advance to second, but I also can't hear what was said by the coach right near him along with the runners actions on the play.
As an umpire, I once had to call back a grand slam. The previous play had taken me out from behind home plate, I called time at the end of the play, and as I was getting behind the plate, the pitcher quick-pitched the batter, who crushed the ball well over the fence. But time was still out. I had not yet gotten into position and put the ball in play.
Why tf would you do that. Were you an ump in the majors? You were probably in decent enough position, just hadn’t signaled to the pitcher to pitch yet, am I right? If you were completely off to the side, like even with the batters box, that’d be outta position but if you appeared to be set to the pitcher, and if he starts his motion and you still haven’t said anything, I think at that point you have to let what happened, happen. Otherwise you’ve influenced the game more than what an ump should be able to influence
"confusion as the umpires take a long time to make the call" You're a top level MLB player. Play like you're still in it until someone tells you you're not. Players milling around scratching their asses until someone says "wtf are you doing, go!" is ridiculous.
if you think about it the last clip the dodgers got 4 outs on that! a quadruple-play! the force at home, one out, then 3rd, two out, then 2nd, three out, and lastly first, four outs. Technically not a real thing still funny to see it. 6:15
Of all the major sports, baseball is the quirkiest one ever. You have a bat which is essentially a stick. You have a little ball. 9 players in the field are wearing big gloves. The offense doesn't control the ball. The defense controls the ball. The other major sports are the opposite on who controls the ball. There are more random and unpredictable things that happen in baseball. Its actually a comical game if you think about it. Ice hockey has alot of unpredictability too, but baseball is a more fun sport to watch in my humble opinion.
@Kevin L 0:26 Aguilar dawdles heading to third, then tries to score when Rosario misses the ball, and thus can't beat the throw. 1:30 Gonzalez is the only one you acknowledged, but it's the least conspicuous. But, I was thinking of that for sure when I typed my comment. Six seconds after he hit the ball, the camera picked him up just rounding first base. That's slow for an MLB player. He spent half a second watching the hit, then, even though we can't see him, obviously wasn't running as hard as he can. That's loafing. 1:56 Bergman assumes it's foul. A non-loafer runs until the umpire calls "foul ball". Even when he realized he needs to run, he jogged to first. 2:16 Davis running about as slowly as possible. 4:03 Altuve pulls up going to third. He's obviously out, but should run hard and distract the fielder. Coming in to second, Correa is taking is time. And Gattis strolling away when he was safe is an egregious form of loafing. 5:10 I'm sure Josh Harrison was taught that when you swing at strike three and the ball goes to the backstop, don't put your head down and run to first as hard as you can. No, keep turning around checking to see if someone will call it a foul ball so you don't have to expend any extra effort. Right? Did he go to Loafers Baseball Academy? 5:23 I'm sure Werth felt angry at the umpires, but it wouldn't have hurt for him to try to run to second instead of putting his hands on his hips like a petulant girl. Maybe Alonso makes a bad throw.
Are you asking why he's out? You can run through first and not be able to be tagged out but only if you run through on the right side of the foul line. Because he turned to the left towards 2nd base he's able to get tagged out even if he goes back into fould territory
@@specialtrades12 That is not true. It is permissible to turn left as long as you don't make a motion toward second base. The runner does not have to run on the right side of the foul line when he over runs first base.
@@detsd59 content.mlb.com/documents/2/2/4/305750224/2019_Official_Baseball_Rules_FINAL_.pdf You're wrong. Nowhere does it state that if a batter-runner retreats towards home to avoid a tag that it is an automatic out. If a player is running in reverse to confuse the defense or as to make a travesty of the game then the player shall be declared out. Nowhere does it state that in between home and first if a player retreats towards home to avoid a tag that it's an automatic out. If I somehow missed it then please quote me the exact ruling.
detsd59 Yo guys, someone might explain to me what happened after he ran that stop the defense from keep playing? Did he throw the ball out of bounds or something? Thanksssss
You're only out for going out of the baseline if someone's actively trying to tag you out. Any other time, you can take any route you want between bases. (Otherwise, you'd see every runner who takes a wide turn on a double called out of the baseline.) Once the defense actually starts to try to tag you out, then at that point you "make your own baseline" and if you go more than three feet outside a line from your current position to the base you're trying to reach, then you're out.
@@ryanstejskal1506 you kind of made my point, "if someone's actively trying to tag you out" . . so, my point was, once the defender starts to walk over to him to "try and tag him out", the umpire should automatically call him out for being out of the baseline.
When the fielder comes to tag him out, that's when the runner makes his own baseline. At that moment in time, he's constrained to try to either return to first base or go toward second base, and he can't deviate from a path to that base _from his position at that point_ by more than three feet. The runner makes his own baseline at the moment the defense begins to try to tag him out - the literal line between first base and second base is irrelevant.
@@DosDonts101 Incorrect, because the baseline is now a straight line towards the base he is going towards. He could run straight towards second from where he was and be in his baseline. Or he could go straight back towards first base (and the defender trying to tag him out). He would then be out of he went beyond 3 feet from either of those lines.
You mean a balk? A balk can only occur when there are baserunners. An illegal pitch with no baserunners would be called a ball. However, the pitch has to cross the foul line for it to be a ball and that one clearly never did.
The problem is that the 1st base umpire didn't make a call either way (at least not one we could see). Had he made either an "out" or "safe" call (meaning the fielder either did or did not catch it), then he would have known which was the correct base to throw to. Because there was no call in real time, he had to guess what to do.
I was confused at first too because I assumed the batter hit it, but he actually swings and misses completely. Since it was a strikeout and a wild pitch he can run to first and they have to throw him out to complete the strikeout.
@@aydanmunson5111 The ball hitting the ground is irrelevant. The pitch did not hit the bat or it would have been a foul ball. It was an uncaught third strike.
NedNed Ned the batter hit the ball. It rolled fair and the catcher dropped the ball trying to tag the batter out. He picked it up and threw it passed the first baseman. The runner from second scored to win the game.
@@Benthewall-vb9ny He's saying from the perspective of the runner after he turned around, the direction of foul territory was to his left. First thing is the runner turned right towards foul territory after veering two steps in the direction of second base. Parker believes that the direction a runner turns after overrunning first is an indication of his intent, however, this is actually a misconception of the rule . "Rule: 7.08(c and j) Official Baseball Rules". There is nothing in the rule book that defines a runner's intent to advance towards second after overrunning first, it's left to the umpires discretion. I guess the umpire took him veering a few feet to the left after chopping his feet to stop as intent. I don't see it though. yes, he veered but never planted or pivoted towards second base.
@@myapatton4119 That's not how it works. That's a myth. The runner is allowed to overrun first base without being at risk to be put out EXCEPT if he makes an attempt at second base, which he was judged to have done here.
Ya know why plays like that happen today. Ball players forget their basic baseball fundamentals if they actually new them at all. The fact players aren’t paying attention to the progress of the game their playing in, is amazing to me. Isn’t that’s what their being paid millions of dollars for???
Shane Haami so morse thought he hit a grand slam (which he did) but the umps thought it never got out of the park. morse overran first because he thought it was a homerun (which it was) but the umps never called it a homerun. then the bases got congested and they tried to get morse out cause none of them thought it was a homerun except him. they ended up reviewing it and called it a homerun but all the runners had to go back to their base and he pretended to hit it so they could all run around again.
Shane Haami no, the ball technically flew out of the park but got knocked back in because there was a wall *behind* the real wall that marks the end of the park. and haha it’s okay
What's confusing is why I just wasted six minutes. (P.S. If you want to see the whole video re: Morse home run, check it out on TH-cam. It's on plenty of channels, just not this one.)
4:04 actually made me laugh lmao Gattis thought there was 3 outs and he’s just running back to the dugout casually 😂😂
1:14 you turn the game on to this
Carter Collins same
@MANCHESTER UNITED what are you doing? Soccer is genuinely my favorite sport, but I'm confused on what you're trying to do. Are you trying to get people to hate both you and soccer? Because that's all that's going to happen
@MANCHESTER UNITED not in the Phillipines soccer nerd
@MANCHESTER UNITED atleast not in Mindanao
@MANCHESTER UNITED basketball is 100 times bigger than soccer here in the Phillipines
It’s a good video, but some of the clips are not long enough to show how the confusion was resolved.
Eg: the clip at 0:56
Kevin L I think that he means that they never explained why it was a home run or why he took the extra swing
So ur telling me the confusion is a little bit confusing
Maybe another video,not sure,crazy
T - Squared Well, what I was thinking wasn’t the grand slam (though why go through the motion of a fake swing, and having everyone run the bases. They no longer require the international walk require four actual pitches, and they are trying to shorten the game. Just add four runs and move on to the next batter) but there were two instances where the pitcher pitches the ball into the ground. Now with runners on base, that’s usually a balk. The one with the sound guy was not so confusing - he caused the pitcher to get distracted, so - no call. But in another one, there were runners in motion, and we never get to see the outcome after the runner on third reaches home. But all other runners would advance, and I am guessing that’s what happened, but the clip ends at that point, so we don’t see the outcome.
The first one, where the batter just freezes, and is out on a called strike, seems less confusing, though it baffled the broadcasters. Some hitters are “guess hitters” (for lack of a better term), by which I mean they tend to guess what kind of pitch is coming. This batter just guessed wrong, and was fooled by the pitch. He knew it, and just headed back to the dugout. Batters get a fraction of a second to decide whether or not to swing. And pitchers obviously are trying to fool them. In this case, the pitcher threw a different pitch than the batter was expecting. And the batter knew it. He froze.
Today, pro teams scout each other so closely, using video (from previous games) and even computers to see where opposing hitters strong points and weak points are (high, low, inside, outside). Batters will try to figure out what kind of pitches, and locations, in different circumstances. So the pitcher and batter are each trying to outsmart each other. The pitcher outsmarted the batter in that first clip. The batter just wasn’t expecting that pitch.
3:40 how is this a confusing play?
Its not
Because the pirates were covering the bases and the wind confused them by pulling a illegal play by colliding with the pirates in fielder
Wtf?
That's interference. Two free throws to the Steelers.
It would have been better if Morse called his shot
That Would've Been Hilarious 🤣🤣🤣
I was thinking of the scene in "Major League" where Jake hits the phantom homer in the empty ball park, does the high five with nobody, and Wild Thing and Willie Hayes comment on how far he hit it and what pitch it was.
eauhomme that’s crazy, cause it’s literally on TV right now
I think he should have bunted.
Just imagine turning the tv on to that
The last three:
The pitcher spiking the pitch, scoring the runner--Even if they got the throw home to tag the runner, he scores. A wild pitch that never reaches the foul line is a balk.
The second to last play (Ben Gamel)--simply being in fair territory after overrunning first is not a reason to be called out. It is a judgment call as to whether he actually turned to run to second, versus simply slowing down to go back to first.
The last play--the umpire raised his hands and moved them outward in the classic "foul ball" signal prior to pointing fair. He killed the play. In that situation, also, if the ball hit the batter's hands, it's a dead ball strike (no, the hands are NOT part of the bat).
Third play. It's a dead ball for sure but only a strike if an attempt to swing was made. Otherwise it is a hit batsman because, as you correctly said, the hand is never part of the bat. In this example, he was squared to bunt so if the ball hit his hand instead of the bat it would be a dead ball strike.
Hey there not plays you see every day
The second to last one - being in fair territory after you overrun first is very much a... live player i guess you would call it... no judgement call there at all
The last play is clearly a live ball. I will take you thru it step by step.
You hear the ball hit the bat, in replays you see the ball hit the bat, not his hand.
The ball hits home plate yes, but then rolls fair. (Ellis picks it up in fair territory. The ball may have gone behind the plate at some point, but it never stopped, it went back into the field a play, making it fair)
The umpire does make the "foul ball" motion, however, that doesn't automatically "kill the play." He then later makes the fair ball motion and the Dodgers turn the triple play. If anything it looks like he is moving backwords trying to stay out of the way, not to call it foul.
Don't blame the Dodgers for actually taking advantage of the fact that NONE of the Padres even try to advance. They just stayed put at their bases. That's THEIR fault. They should have tried to run, cause if it is foul, then they just return to their base anyways no harm. Poor baserunning all around.
The ump is a bit at fault. But if he didn't call the play fair, seriously go watch the replay showing it go fair, then the Dodgers would be screwed. Either way, a team was gonna get screwed in that scenario, so getting the play call right on the field should be the priority to salvage the situation, and that's what they did.
@David Riedy Depends on the wording of the rule. I know for softball (I don't do baseball), I would not rule this an attempt to advance. However I think MLB's rules do specify this as an attempt to advance. I recall an issue with Puig and the Dodgers a few years ago similar to this and he was called out.
4:26 dude was just feeling a little motley... nothing wrong with that😂🔥🤘🏼
I thought Stone Cold was about to come out or something.
@@asbrozek64 kickstart my heart
3:22 That's sportsmanship. Calling timeout to the advantage of the other team.
Ehh, he probably was distracted from the pitch by homeboy running past his field of view
no he was making them go back to their positions
At 4:28, is that a pitch or is some kind of interference called?
I think you'd just call that No Pitch. Umpire's discretion if he wants to eject the sound guy.
Unnecessary dives
In the last clip the plate umpire raised his hands in a "where is the ball?" gesture and then raised them again in a "dead ball" gesture. That ball should have been declared dead.
MLB Longest plays
None of these were confusing plays. If you are confused just ask and I'll explain.
The only one that seemed legit is the play at 6:15 as the umpire put both his hands up and his body language is what is used when the play is dead either from a foul ball or a hit by pitch(basically a stop in play). He then looked down and pointed in fair territory to signal the ball was in play. You can see the head of the runner at 2B stopping and going back when he sees the hands go up. I'm sure the umpire threw his hands up as a "I'm not in the way/getting out of the way" gesture however it should have not been ruled the way it was. I'm not an umpire nor do I have extensive rule knowledge to know what the actual outcome should have been (no pitch/foul ball) but the umps hands went up which signals a stoppage in play, runners should not have been punished.
If you are wondering about the guy that swung at no pitch and ran the bases... because he was called out on the play going back to 1B he left the bases... they did the replay and the hit was ruled a HR because it hit the yellow (or above) line. So legally in baseball you must touch all the bases. So they had him go back and start over with his swing and round the bases. In short the ruling was they had to go back and "replay" the at bat and do the corrective course of action.
thegreatcerebral
I agree, the runners should not be punished for the ump using wrong sign language and then reversing his own calls.
The ump should be punished for mis-use of sign language and do 100 push-ups. 🤣
thegreatcerebral what was the point of the very first clip? i’m baffled sorry 😂
Alex Pauli the first clip... I don’t know the history of that play but it looks like the batter was pissed at something and he did that as a way to show his unhappiness with either the strikezone or something that happened.
That’s all I can come up with considering we don’t know the history.
Thank god OP doesn't show replays so I have to rewatch it manually on half of these
Show more of the video after the play, you cut them too short
What's funny about 5:19 is there's a few seconds of more confusion right at the end of the clip. There was one out at the start of the play and the batter (Rendon) was safe at first. You can see the umpire call it. After Werth was tagged out, they zoom in on Upton jogging in as if the inning's over, and the graphic even advances to three outs. At the last split second you see Upton pull up, because the umpires were probably signalling to everyone that there were still two outs, and Rendon was safe at first.
I love that last one! Yes, it looked dangerously close to a hit batter, but the ball came off the bat, it's live, and 6-4-3, triple play, inning over.
but the home plate umpire signaled dead ball.......twice........go back and watch the play. You can't call dead ball, then penalize the runners for not advancing.
Yea, really bad mechanics by HU
Play at 6:11 I get called out on that for looking around to find the ball and being considered a live baserunner off a single trot I'm protesting the game. That's a terrible call
Odd, he turned towards the foul territory, not towards second base.
Still mad Michael Morse didn’t bunt for a grand slam
Josh Harrison. U should do a video on just him avoiding the tag.
3:40 how do you even score that one?
They need more loud audio interuptions in games lmao
The music turning on in az. Was my favorite
I also like Kick Start My Heart by Motley Crue.
There was one unusual triple play some time ago that I cannot find now. All I remember is two of the umpires in that clip (Tim Tschida and Balking Bob - no, he didn’t eject anyone in that clip), and after Tschida went over the play with Davidson and the other umps, he wound up calling three outs on the play - runners on first, third, and home.
"Heres the throw-
*THROW EM OUT!*
"Out at the plate"
2:42 a very similar thing happened today between the Brewers and Cubs. Weird
You know these are the best baseball players in the world but sometimes they make mistakes just like everybody else
The red sox yankees clip at 4:57 should have resulted in a double play. Runner was put out at 2nd on the force and then interfered with a throw to first for the double play. By rule a runner put out can't interfere with a play.
At 1:13 is what we do in practice in 10u and I'm number 39 one way from being 38❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
5:19 That's not a double play because the batter wasn't tagged out.
They didn’t call it a double play on the field
@@santaclause3487 You could see on the score display that it went from 1 out to 3 out.
Okay I think I figured it out. The people running the tv scoreboard thought it was a double play and not a trapped ball. That’s why it went from 1-3 outs. The ump called the batter safe at first. And only tagged the runner. The only player that left the field was the center fielder who trapped it trying to sell it as a catch.
On the pirates ground crew guy, didnt the next day they have an outline on the field?
What's up with 6:03? Why was he able to be tagged after getting safely to first base?
After he ran through the bag, he turned left into fair territory. You are only safe if you turn towards foul territory after running through the bag; if you turn left/fair, then you are an active base runner (possibly heading to second base).
@@AndyLundeen, no that is wrong. A runner may turn left into fair territory as long as he returns immediately to first base and doesn't make a motion to advance to second. In the umpire's judgement, he made a move to second base.
Is that so? Haven’t checked the rules explicitly; thanks for being more correct and precise then!
@@alanhess9306 That is the key part of the ruling. In the umpires judgment. I personally would not have ruled that intent to advance to second, but I also can't hear what was said by the coach right near him along with the runners actions on the play.
5:49 isn't that a balk if it doesn't cross foul line? All runners advance 1 base?
What was the result of the last play?
As an umpire, I once had to call back a grand slam. The previous play had taken me out from behind home plate, I called time at the end of the play, and as I was getting behind the plate, the pitcher quick-pitched the batter, who crushed the ball well over the fence. But time was still out. I had not yet gotten into position and put the ball in play.
Dang I sure there were a lot of angry people to deal with there
Why tf would you do that. Were you an ump in the majors? You were probably in decent enough position, just hadn’t signaled to the pitcher to pitch yet, am I right? If you were completely off to the side, like even with the batters box, that’d be outta position but if you appeared to be set to the pitcher, and if he starts his motion and you still haven’t said anything, I think at that point you have to let what happened, happen. Otherwise you’ve influenced the game more than what an ump should be able to influence
@@jarrettrasmussen4770 Nothing can happen until the umpire puts the ball in play. That's why he did it.
I honestly was expecting more Padres plays
Lol umpire t-posing in the thumbnail
Shut up
0:22 Ah yes, the old 4-3-7-2 single play.
Can you do safe on drop third strike
Top bb games that got ruined by Joe Buck
6:09 really good commentating there. I actually thought it was really funny haha
5:55 it’s a balk it would be a dead ball. Since it never reached the foul line. All runners would advance.
"confusion as the umpires take a long time to make the call"
You're a top level MLB player. Play like you're still in it until someone tells you you're not. Players milling around scratching their asses until someone says "wtf are you doing, go!" is ridiculous.
Settle down tough guy.
if you think about it the last clip the dodgers got 4 outs on that! a quadruple-play! the force at home, one out, then 3rd, two out, then 2nd, three out, and lastly first, four outs. Technically not a real thing still funny to see it. 6:15
There was no force at home
Blazing Corsair oh man you are right! I thought it was bases loaded!
Technically there is such a thing as the advantageous fourth out, but not in this situation.
0:53 #uhhohh from the Jim Rome show clones!!
Of all the major sports, baseball is the quirkiest one ever. You have a bat which is essentially a stick. You have a little ball. 9 players in the field are wearing big gloves. The offense doesn't control the ball. The defense controls the ball. The other major sports are the opposite on who controls the ball. There are more random and unpredictable things that happen in baseball.
Its actually a comical game if you think about it. Ice hockey has alot of unpredictability too, but baseball is a more fun sport to watch in my humble opinion.
THANK YOU FOR SAYING THIS
The old 4-3-7-2 double play
3:40 only in Pittsburgh....
you edited some parts out....
It's amazing how many of these feature a runner loafing instead of running hard.
@Kevin L 0:26 Aguilar dawdles heading to third, then tries to score when Rosario misses the ball, and thus can't beat the throw.
1:30 Gonzalez is the only one you acknowledged, but it's the least conspicuous. But, I was thinking of that for sure when I typed my comment. Six seconds after he hit the ball, the camera picked him up just rounding first base. That's slow for an MLB player. He spent half a second watching the hit, then, even though we can't see him, obviously wasn't running as hard as he can. That's loafing.
1:56 Bergman assumes it's foul. A non-loafer runs until the umpire calls "foul ball". Even when he realized he needs to run, he jogged to first.
2:16 Davis running about as slowly as possible.
4:03 Altuve pulls up going to third. He's obviously out, but should run hard and distract the fielder. Coming in to second, Correa is taking is time. And Gattis strolling away when he was safe is an egregious form of loafing.
5:10 I'm sure Josh Harrison was taught that when you swing at strike three and the ball goes to the backstop, don't put your head down and run to first as hard as you can. No, keep turning around checking to see if someone will call it a foul ball so you don't have to expend any extra effort. Right? Did he go to Loafers Baseball Academy?
5:23 I'm sure Werth felt angry at the umpires, but it wouldn't have hurt for him to try to run to second instead of putting his hands on his hips like a petulant girl. Maybe Alonso makes a bad throw.
1:20 did anyone think of the movie major league. (Sheen) what was that, a slider. (Wesley) it was out of here.
what happened in the SEA - LAA game at like 6:10
Are you asking why he's out? You can run through first and not be able to be tagged out but only if you run through on the right side of the foul line. Because he turned to the left towards 2nd base he's able to get tagged out even if he goes back into fould territory
@@specialtrades12 That is not true. It is permissible to turn left as long as you don't make a motion toward second base. The runner does not have to run on the right side of the foul line when he over runs first base.
the guy getting caught in the rain tarp was a confusing play? ok.
He got 2 minutes for icing.
Thumbnail stamp?
3:50 getting caught in a deflated bouncy castle
1:57 A batter runner cannot retreat back to home plate. Automatic out. Houston run should never have counted to end the game.
Yes they can. You can do anything to avoid getting tagged except running out of the base line.
@@Bladen
No they can't. Find a rule book and read it.
@@detsd59 content.mlb.com/documents/2/2/4/305750224/2019_Official_Baseball_Rules_FINAL_.pdf
You're wrong. Nowhere does it state that if a batter-runner retreats towards home to avoid a tag that it is an automatic out. If a player is running in reverse to confuse the defense or as to make a travesty of the game then the player shall be declared out. Nowhere does it state that in between home and first if a player retreats towards home to avoid a tag that it's an automatic out. If I somehow missed it then please quote me the exact ruling.
@@detsd59 I believe that's a softball rule. It's definitely not a baseball rule.
detsd59
Yo guys, someone might explain to me what happened after he ran that stop the defense from keep playing? Did he throw the ball out of bounds or something? Thanksssss
2:45 is cain being 20000000 IQ
While everyone else's hit zero
for the next vid MLB most dangerous plays
1:50 I think he threw a riser
4:20 - did he really need to tag him? He's like 20 feet from the baseline.
You're only out for going out of the baseline if someone's actively trying to tag you out. Any other time, you can take any route you want between bases. (Otherwise, you'd see every runner who takes a wide turn on a double called out of the baseline.) Once the defense actually starts to try to tag you out, then at that point you "make your own baseline" and if you go more than three feet outside a line from your current position to the base you're trying to reach, then you're out.
@@ryanstejskal1506 you kind of made my point, "if someone's actively trying to tag you out" . . so, my point was, once the defender starts to walk over to him to "try and tag him out", the umpire should automatically call him out for being out of the baseline.
When the fielder comes to tag him out, that's when the runner makes his own baseline. At that moment in time, he's constrained to try to either return to first base or go toward second base, and he can't deviate from a path to that base _from his position at that point_ by more than three feet. The runner makes his own baseline at the moment the defense begins to try to tag him out - the literal line between first base and second base is irrelevant.
@@DosDonts101 Incorrect, because the baseline is now a straight line towards the base he is going towards. He could run straight towards second from where he was and be in his baseline. Or he could go straight back towards first base (and the defender trying to tag him out). He would then be out of he went beyond 3 feet from either of those lines.
Yes, they need to tag him. There was no basepath the runner needed to be in.
4:36 The worst feeling in the world.
3:41, sorry, but that made me laughed so hard.
1:53 when a baby sees its shadow for the first time
This is the dumbest comment I’ve ever seen. Take my like
I'm a little bit confused because I'm not confused you know.
6:30 - Plate umpire unfairly cost the Padres.
@2:48 this my favorite part
4:27 Wouldn't this have been a Bulk pitch.
You mean a balk? A balk can only occur when there are baserunners. An illegal pitch with no baserunners would be called a ball. However, the pitch has to cross the foul line for it to be a ball and that one clearly never did.
Because of the noise, there was no balk called and there were no runners on base so it is called no pitch anyway.
2:18 He should have threw to first at first
The problem is that the 1st base umpire didn't make a call either way (at least not one we could see). Had he made either an "out" or "safe" call (meaning the fielder either did or did not catch it), then he would have known which was the correct base to throw to.
Because there was no call in real time, he had to guess what to do.
Why at 5:10 was it not foul?
CHAD I think it isn’t because the ball never hit the ground before it was caught, it hit the wall, bounced up, and was caught
I was confused at first too because I assumed the batter hit it, but he actually swings and misses completely. Since it was a strikeout and a wild pitch he can run to first and they have to throw him out to complete the strikeout.
@@aydanmunson5111 The ball hitting the ground is irrelevant. The pitch did not hit the bat or it would have been a foul ball. It was an uncaught third strike.
New ideas thanks
After you called it dead, you cannot call any outs , it's against the rules of baseball
The thumbmail or nail is the umpire doing the t pose
It's Snazz from Fortnite?
TOMATO HEAD CRINGE
Huh
TOMATO HEAD it’s not from fortnite lmao
T pose is in fortnite
@0:04 um... WTH is he looking at the ball???
Haha. They left the groundsman to fly away. Poor dude crawled out of there for his life.
What happen in 2:00
I join the question
NedNed Ned the batter hit the ball. It rolled fair and the catcher dropped the ball trying to tag the batter out. He picked it up and threw it passed the first baseman. The runner from second scored to win the game.
Shortest challenges and longest challenges ever
( how long the umps had the headphones on)
That first example almost looked like a ball.. not a strike
You're kidding right? The ball was clearly over the plate well above the knees.
So it’s just the umps that are confused?
What happened,guess it is another video,the football reference was funny!
boy, do I understand half of these ?!
6:05 ben gamel was safe because gage turned left into the the foul territory
Parker Landrum what???
He turned left into fair territory
@@Benthewall-vb9ny He's saying from the perspective of the runner after he turned around, the direction of foul territory was to his left. First thing is the runner turned right towards foul territory after veering two steps in the direction of second base. Parker believes that the direction a runner turns after overrunning first is an indication of his intent, however, this is actually a misconception of the rule . "Rule: 7.08(c and j)
Official Baseball Rules". There is nothing in the rule book that defines a runner's intent to advance towards second after overrunning first, it's left to the umpires discretion. I guess the umpire took him veering a few feet to the left after chopping his feet to stop as intent. I don't see it though. yes, he veered but never planted or pivoted towards second base.
No he turned left so now he is able to be tagged
@@myapatton4119 That's not how it works. That's a myth. The runner is allowed to overrun first base without being at risk to be put out EXCEPT if he makes an attempt at second base, which he was judged to have done here.
Dude there’s a person in the tarp
He took the pitch that was a changup down the middle
Ya know why plays like that happen today. Ball players forget their basic baseball fundamentals if they actually new them at all. The fact players aren’t paying attention to the progress of the game their playing in, is amazing to me. Isn’t that’s what their being paid millions of dollars for???
1:15 watch the catcher
DrottsFishingTV WaS tHaT a MiDdLe FiNgEr I jUsT sAw?
4:32😂😂😂
Where was the confusion?
how you get hit by a ball and the ball is live on the last clip...someone shoulda been fired there.
The batter did not get hit. The pitch hit the bat.
I dont understand the Morse grandslam. can someone please help
Shane Haami so morse thought he hit a grand slam (which he did) but the umps thought it never got out of the park. morse overran first because he thought it was a homerun (which it was) but the umps never called it a homerun. then the bases got congested and they tried to get morse out cause none of them thought it was a homerun except him. they ended up reviewing it and called it a homerun but all the runners had to go back to their base and he pretended to hit it so they could all run around again.
@@layla-wd5fc but the ball hit the wall and stayed in the park, which means it's fair play to make any out, doesn't it?? sorry for my confusion.
Shane Haami no, the ball technically flew out of the park but got knocked back in because there was a wall *behind* the real wall that marks the end of the park. and haha it’s okay
@@layla-wd5fc oh ok I get it now, cool, it just looks like there's one wall there. thanks eddie
Shane Haami haha it’s fine and np lmao
why are they confusing?
1:13 literally the stupidest thing in MLB history, not the greatest.
1:40 What in the all mighty fuck is everyone doing.
What the... 4:25 ?
What's confusing is why I just wasted six minutes. (P.S. If you want to see the whole video re: Morse home run, check it out on TH-cam. It's on plenty of channels, just not this one.)
Hey too video
I wasn't confused once.
you spelled gattis wrong
What cho talkin' bout Willis.
Catcher*
I love baseball