Will be hard to keep that streak going with Johnson pitching. Expected to be his last performance tonight if he doesn't turn things round.Another streak begins with two road wins, fully deserved.
Will be hard to keep that streak going with Johnson pitching. Expected to be his last performance tonight if he doesn't turn things round.Another streak begins with two road wins, fully deserved.
Yes, I am aware of the feet inbound rule but didn't remember offhand if one foot or both feet had to be inbound.http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_feet_must_touch_to_be_a_legal_catchMany times a season, players catch a thrown pass where the ball has broken the boundries of the field, is 'out of bounds', yet because the player's feet are inbounds, it is ruled a 'complete pass'.
A difference is that rinks and goals are standardized in hockey, not so baseball.Yes, I am aware of the feet inbound rule but didn't remember offhand if one foot or both feet had to be inbound.http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_feet_must_touch_to_be_a_legal_catch
"In the NFL, a receiver must have both feet land inbounds for the catch to be legal. In college ball, a receiver must have only one foot land in bounds for the catch to be legal."
IMO, outfielder reaching over the fence to "pull back a home run" is analogous to a hockey goalie reaching over the goalline to catch a puck to "pull back a goal".
Well, that's baseball for you. It has a way of fucking your expectations over.Tonight's pitching match up: Felix Hernandez vs Josh Johnson
He was up over 85 pitches I think. And Gibby didn't want to press him. A lot of JJ's issues I think have been confidence. This will help buid it up a bit. I have tickets for saturday. Not sure if there is an off day in between so I either get him or Dickey.we all believed...now JJ can win a few...but only 5 innings???
Saturday's scheduled starters are Buerhle (7-7) vs Griffin (10-8)He was up over 85 pitches I think. And Gibby didn't want to press him. A lot of JJ's issues I think have been confidence. This will help buid it up a bit. I have tickets for saturday. Not sure if there is an off day in between so I either get him or Dickey.
Doesn't matter. If you have read the posts above on this subject, it would still be an out.Couldn't really tell from the replay but that ball might have actually "broke the plane" when Rasmus caught it. Great catch!
Still a great catch. That wall is 8' high so I think it is possible for an outfielder with a leap and an outstretched arm to "pull back a home run" that did break the plane. Maybe it will still happen in this series.Doesn't matter. If you have read the posts above on this subject, it would still be an out.
And, the ball was not close to breaking your precious plane.
Many of baseball's rules are predicated on where the ball is when it actually touches the ground or passes a certain point. Balls that have not actually yet landed in the field of play are judged by where they first hit the ground, a wall or a player. There are some strange rules but they are quite clear. If a ball passes a bases in the air above fair territory but lands in foul territory it is a foul ball. If a ball passes the outfield wall in the air above fair territory but lands in the seats in foul territory it is a fair ball. Doesn't make sense in some ways, but it is very clear in the rules.Yes, I am aware of the feet inbound rule but didn't remember offhand if one foot or both feet had to be inbound.http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_feet_must_touch_to_be_a_legal_catch
"In the NFL, a receiver must have both feet land inbounds for the catch to be legal. In college ball, a receiver must have only one foot land in bounds for the catch to be legal."
IMO, outfielder reaching over the fence to "pull back a home run" is analogous to a hockey goalie reaching over the goalline to catch a puck to "pull back a goal".
RS might claim that this would be an assisted HR because it had help, needing an asterix.Many of baseball's rules are predicated on where the ball is when it actually touches the ground or passes a certain point. Balls that have not actually yet landed in the field of play are judged by where they first hit the ground, a wall or a player. There are some strange rules but they are quite clear. If a ball passes a bases in the air above fair territory but lands in foul territory it is a foul ball. If a ball passes the outfield wall in the air above fair territory but lands in the seats in foul territory it is a fair ball. Doesn't make sense in some ways, but it is very clear in the rules.
In hockey a goal doesn't have to land in the net, it just has to break the plane of the goal line. In baseball the ball has to land in the seats. Strangely enough, if a ball hits a player in the field of play and bounces directly over the fence in fair territory it is a homerun. Again, a strange rule but clearly stated in the rulebook.
To clarify, if a hit strikes a defensive player, the above is true.Many of baseball's rules are predicated on where the ball is when it actually touches the ground or passes a certain point. Balls that have not actually yet landed in the field of play are judged by where they first hit the ground, a wall or a player. There are some strange rules but they are quite clear. If a ball passes a bases in the air above fair territory but lands in foul territory it is a foul ball. If a ball passes the outfield wall in the air above fair territory but lands in the seats in foul territory it is a fair ball. Doesn't make sense in some ways, but it is very clear in the rules.
In hockey a goal doesn't have to land in the net, it just has to break the plane of the goal line. In baseball the ball has to land in the seats. Strangely enough, if a ball hits a player in the field of play and bounces directly over the fence in fair territory it is a homerun. Again, a strange rule but clearly stated in the rulebook.
True. The likelihood of a ball striking a baserunner and bouncing over the fence in fair territory is unlikely enough that it probably eliminated the necessity to mention that it needed to be a defensive player.To clarify, if a hit strikes a defensive player, the above is true.