@9Blair, Even IF the pitcher had "noticed", so what? There wasn't a CATCHER for him to *throw to* at the time, and so (as the video made clear) that run was on the catcher rather than the pitcher.
@@critter2 it happens in MLB as well. I was a game where Brady Anderson and Delano Shields failed to fun out an infield batted ball on a wet field. Both would have been safe had the run to first. Both were out even though the fielder slipped and fell.
oh, by the way, that was the NorthWest Region Championship game. Idaho was one out from going to Williamsport; instead they let Oregon steal home to tie, and gave up another run as well to give Oregon the lead. Oregon held them in the bottom of the 6th, and went to Williamsport instead. A very expensive lesson indeed.
Had this EXACT play in a high school game years ago. The defensive coach came unglued as his arguement was "the pitcher was in the circle." I asked him "what circle?" He stated once the pitcher has the ball in the dirt circle, the runners cannot advance. I simply explained to him if the ball is live, runner can advance. Eventually he just let it go....it was a head scratcher for me him trying to pass that off as his arguement.
I skipped the high school part. But I’ve had travel teams. Get mad about my rulings. Saying “in our league.” And I always say. “Well that’s cool that your league does that but here we have slightly different rules apparently. I suggest you read the rule book for each field you play at in the future to avoid these types of situations.” Normally gets them to shut up real quick. Had 1 guy ask for my bosses number. My boss then told me always eject someone who does that. But I didn’t because I wanted to hear him say not 2 mins later. “You were right”
That comes from the 8-10 yo divisions where if the pitcher is ready to pitch (not within the 'circle') runners cannot advance. It's so much fun having to remind high school football coaches of the rule differences between their rules and the rules for college and pro's. My standard answer is, "That's a Saturday (or Sunday) rule, coach." The same sometimes applies to baseball, but not as often.
When the pitcher has the ball everyone knows play is over, it's unwritten rule like not shooting the basketball when you are ahead and the clock is winding down for the game to end, everyone quits playing, you don't just run in for a layup because no one is guarding you, it's understood.
@@tnoble As soon as I hear "everyone knows" I assume it is another made rule of one of those baseball rules that everyone knows, but won't find it in a rule book. If it is an unwritten rule, then it isn't a rule.
This is why, when I managed Little League, I taught my players the rules AND, the little nuances like this. My players when on both, offense and defense, were ALWAYS aware of these things. You know what? My players were always highly aware of situations and looked for things like this. Other coaches in the league hated us because I taught my kids this. I wanted my players to be well rounded in the game strategy, as well as, the basics of playing the game.
Reminds me of a play in my little league days. I hit a double and came into second standing up just ahead of the tag. I look over and see the third baseman was not covering his base. When the second baseman threw the ball to the pitcher I took off for third. They was never a play there. I surprised them again and didn't stop at third, I ran home. The pitcher rushed the throw home and the catcher couldn't handle it. Catcher dropped the ball and I scored on a double.
"...without a compelling reason..." THANK YOU. i am so tired of players requesting "time" the instant a tag play is over, sometimes even before the safe/out call is rendered. another common request is when the ball is thrown in from the outfield to an infielder, even without a play. there is NO REASON (not even "compelling") to grant "time" in these circumstances, so i never do. i get grief from the coaches, but who cares. just stand up, or get the ball to the pitcher, and KEEP PLAYING...
Had a similar thing happen to me in highschool softball. My team faced a really good pitcher who had struck out all our batters the previous inning. Top of the line-up I went up to bat and managed to beat the throw to first. Next two batters were out, but I was on third because thank you to whoever invented stealing bases. Anyway--apparently the opponent team forgot that I was on base and thought there were three outs. The pitcher simply dropped the ball, the catcher and em started walking away and soon the rest of the team followed. I stood there confused for a few seconds because I knew there were only two outs then my coach screamed at me to run. The shortstop who was walking toward the dug out just stared at me confused as I walked over home plate. My only regret--not simply walking to the plate for the laughs XD
hey, that's my good friend and mentor at U1 and that tent out in left center with the LL logo on it is my house. I sure hope I get to visit my house this year.
well I guess that's that then... my "house" at Al Houghton Stadium will not be put up this year. A big loss for everyone but my daughter... "daddy, it's too hot.... daddy, baseball is boring... daddy, it takes too long between games..."
@@davej3781 We will see... IF they let people in, I'll come see you @ D30 and you can come see us at the D62 tent! Several of our friends are getting the opportunity of a lifetime... 2nd regional and or world series assignments! How cool is that?
@@Kevin-jy3uj yeah, I've heard the story, pretty cool for those guys. strange that we don't know if fans will be allowed 6 weeks from now, when everything else is already fully open with minimal precautions... hopefully they are re-evaluating as we get closer to the tournament.
I did something similar to this when I was 10 years old in kid pitch. I was on 3rd after coming from 1st base off a double. The Catcher just gets up and walks out to the pitcher to talk (never called time). Had more than enough space to steal home, especially since no one was covering the bag at 3rd or home.
That play will ultimately be that coaches legend. He will always be that “ Knucklehead coach who was 1 out away from Going to the LLWS”. Every player and parent on that time will NEVER forget. That’s baseball for you. Any parent who had a kid go to a post season tournament will understand what I’m talking about.
This is a very good video and one can learn a lot. As a Little League coach of several years, I would caution some of the comments you make about “the catcher inventing in a new way . . .” These kids are 12 year olds. Your comment borders on snarkiness. Save it for MLB players making millions.
We pulled the exact play on a local little league powerhouse. I sent a kid home when the catcher walked to the dugout after collecting a ball that got away from him, without calling time. A sent the runner on 3rd. The coaches, players and fans were outraged. They were so upset they totally collapsed and we took that tournament. I ran into the ump that winter at a basketball tournament. He lives in that area and had his house egged that weekend.
Lots of people here seem to think that umpires are supposed to be stopping play for all kinds of extra stuff. The umpire isn't the 10th member of the defense. Time only gets called in a few specific instances. This isn't one of them. The ball is live. I kinda think the Idaho coach knew that too, but was fishing for anything he could get. I seriously doubt he makes it all the way to the northwest regionals without knowing the ball is live.
When the player walked onto the field to pick up the bat ump should have called time or made an interference call. If play was live that player isn't allowed on the field.
@@edwinhughes6493 I'm going to call you out every single time you make this stupid comment. you are wrong, dead wrong, stop saying this crap or cite the rule
You are right. The Umpire knew the rule. The 3rd base COACH knew the rule. And now players on both teams know the rule. That's part of what coaching little league is about. Teaching children how to play and the rules of their sport.
by the way, when the catcher goes and talks to his coach, that can be a charged visit to the pitcher. he probably didn't ask for time trying to avoid it being a charged visit, and suffered the consequences
In softball the ball is dead when it hits the ground (hence, no stealing in softball) HOWEVER, fastpitch softball is another animal. (If your daughter plays fastpitch the “animal” is punny) The rules are similar but very different. Fastpitch is like baseball except everything moves faster and more fun to watch too.
No that’s bs, umpire should have called time as soon as the orange team player came onto the field to grab the bat. As soon as someone out of play enters the playing field time must be called or interference issued. That coach could have won that argument if he questioned the bat boy running into the play.
I umpired for years and one thing I noticed way back when was LL players trying to act like MLB players. In and out of the box in between pitches. I had a dozen batters who held up their hand thinking they had time out. They did not. The other coach used this and had the pitcher throw easy strikes while the batters were out of the box. Adjusting gloves, wrist bands , etc. The home plate umpire controls the game. Not the coach, players or parents. Kids wearing expensive gear with a 300.00 bat and can't even hit the ball out of the infield. It is comical at times.
I agree with you about the rules, however, if I'm an umpire, I am calling time because I have a bat in the way at first and a player on the field retrieving the bat that is not the next batter up. I would have sent the player from third just like this coach did, I'm just saying...
Okay, just make sure if you do start to umpire that you learn the rules first. It's not appropriate to call time without a legitimate reason as the game of baseball is intended to be a live game. The bat retrieval is 100% within the rules and expectations. Little League specifically says this player who picks up the bat is supposed to do so and to do it in the way he does it.
@@MJHBaseball The legitimate reason is that the bat is in line from the pitcher to home plate. That technically creates a dangerous situation. But way to be a complete asshat in your response.
@@davej3781 the problem with your response is that a player that is not in play comes out and collects the bat. Making it a dead play in the eyes of the offense. Therefore, time should have been called.
@@scottdaniels3947 the problem with your response is that it is completely wrong in all rulesets. A player or other personel coming out of the dugout to pick up the bat while the ball is live is legal, normal and expected at all levels of baseball. It is truly confounding to ponder where so many people get this ridiculous notion.
at least I dont have to umpire little league and we have JBO instead which uses straight up high school rules with like 5 pages of modified rules that dont really change anything besides pitch count. Little League is like the worst form of baseball ever
What about the extra player on the field retrieving the bat? Can the at bat team send multiple players onto the field of play at any time the ball is lve?
@@tristanbrewer4523 the next on-deck hitter retrieving the bat while the ball is live is entirely normal at every level of baseball. I have no idea why everyone suddenly thinks this is somehow unusual or outside the rules.
@@rhysfuuma4640 the next hitter may generally toss the bat away from the plate area, however the next on-deck hitter would be the one to actually pick it up and return it to the dugout. in little league it's fairly typical that the next on-deck hitter retrieves the bat entirely on his own (aka the hitter "in the hole"... I've never heard of "double deck batter" before in all my years playing, coaching and umpiring... I will assume it's a regional thing) in any case, a player other than the next batter entering the field to retrieve the bat is entirely normal and legal, unless of course they interfere with a play, and there is no reason whatsoever for the umpire to call time because of it. any claim otherwise is absurd and ignorant.
That's weird because I was attending a babe ruth tournament in Medford a couple of years ago and the umpire was calling all pitches that bounced in front of the plate a strike.
For all you girls softball fans this would be borderline look back rule. The reason it is borderline is because pitcher fake throws to third which negates the rule then you need to determine if pitcher an runner are reset long enough
"Any pitch that hits the dirt prior to reaching the catcher is generally considered a wild pitch.". Not if you played for me. My catchers were told that if they did not make a good effort to block such a pitch and it got by them I would score it a passed ball. Result? The number of wild pitches went way down to less than 10 the last year I coached HS baseball. None of that one handed Johnny Bench crap was allowed or tolerated. My catchers were also required to show up to practice 10 minutes early for the sole purpose of going thru drills designed to block pitches in the dirt.
@@garygemmell3488 Ok, then you were scoring it wrong. It's fine to coach your catchers to make every effort to block every pitch regardless of how its scored, but there is a rulebook for a reason. That reason is consistency.
@@Dynamice1337 You so funny. I'm scoring it for MY team and no one else's. I will score it the way I see fit. I don't care whether you think it's wrong. I was consistent in how I applied the rule, to wit: 2-26 A passed ball is a pitch which the catcher fails to stop or control when he should have been able to do so with ORDINARY EFFORT, and which enables a runner including the batter-runner to advance. 2-41 A wild pitch is one which cannot be handled by the catcher with ORDINARY EFFORT. Those are the HS rules concerning wild pitches and passed balls. The MLB rule is virtually the same. If my catcher made no effort, let alone an ordinary effort, on what could be a wild pitch I am not going to penalize my pitcher for the catcher's laziness. Especially when I know what my catcher is capable of. No effort is never ordinary effort.
@@garygemmell3488 That is correct for high school rules. OBR scores differently. In NFHS if the catcher could/should have blocked the pitch and not allowed a runner to advance, it's a passed ball. In OBR if the ball hits the dirt prior to reaching the glove of the catcher and a runner advances, it's a wild pitch.
This is no different than a runner on second taking a steal to 3rd because the 3rd baseman had either gotten pulled toward home, or just wasn't paying attention and came away from the bag. Just the same as if a runner takes his foot off the bag, and is immediately tagged out by the baseman who never through the ball back to the pitcher.
they don't want to ask for time because it will more likely be a charged defensive visit if they ask for time. it looks like they'd gotten into a bad habit of sneaking in these little defensive conferences, and ultimately paid the price. I should ask my friend who was on that crew (U1) if they were doing that the whole game. I doubt I'd let the defense get away with that more than once. It's one thing if F2 takes a couple of steps away to quickly make sure he and his coach are on the same page, but here it looks like F2 walks all the way to the dugout fence... "Mike, that's a visit!" But, giving up a run probably fixes up that bad habit quicker than whatever the umpire might do.
little league players, particularly on defense, holding their hands out and shoulders shrugged. the telltale sign that they have messed up, they know it, and are looking for someone to excuse their lack of discipline. so here comes the head coach, knowing that he has to deal with the parents after the game, to put on a show. sad...
If it was not a close play, it seems normal to not display a runner is safe. For example, a hitter gets a single the first base ump does not signal safe. Only if an actual play for an out was done.
there was no play on the runner, so there was nothing to signal. signaling "safe" when a runner reaches a base with no play is a mark of the rank beginner umpire, who should certainly have no business on a LLWS Regional crew.
@@brianyoungberg9904 exactly. Even a play at first and the runner is safe by a few steps. They just put up the safe sign. You only voice a call when it's very close. On plays that are not close everyone knows the outcome so you just do the sign. This case there wasn't even a play. I would have signaled safe without a voice call but either or works here.
Maybe the coach thought time was called because one of the other team's players came on to the field to collect the bat? If time had not been called, that player had no business being in the field of play.
That player is required to get the bat. Batboys and batgirls are not allowed to be used. Teams on offense are required to retrieve the bat as needed. The bat was in fair territory, so he got it. If it's in foul territory, that is STILL THE FIELD OF PLAY. Location is irrelevant. TIME should never called in the situation seen in the video unless the umpire completely mess up.
the problem with softball and its more when they throw back to pitcher is when they run (legal) is most softball umpires call time, when shouldn't i don't grant time if not needed. rather bases or plate, or till ball is in circle than i grant time. if coach or player needed it.
Honestly though...offensive player who are in no way connected to the play shouldn't be allowed to walk onto the field in fair territory for ANY reason. That should automatically declare the play dead. One could argue the bright orange uniforms was a distraction to the fielders.
That is common practice at EVERY level of baseball. You may not see it on camera, but if you attend any level game, you will always see non-active players retrieving the bat from wherever it is located even during an active play.
@@MJHBaseball Sure...but when there is a play like this, that should be the risks you take in that it couild cause you to lose out by doing it. And honestly...it really DOESN'T happen very often. You don't generally see players TOTALLY not in the play (;even the on-deck batter) walking onto the field before the play is over, other than a game winning home run to congratulate the runner. But that is a dead ball. And should never. If you are in a league where players not in the play are running onto the field, you should tell them to stop. There is NO reason to do it. And they could get hurt since they are an unexpected presence on the field. You sure as hell don't see MLB players just wandering onto the field during a live ball to retrieve a bat. The umpires will often do that if the bat is in the way on a play that takes a long time to finish up. But even if the umpire doesn't, the on deck batter doesn't actually cross into fair territory to do so. They are usually standing on the first base side of home plate to give the runner trying to score a signal to slide or not. How far do you want to take that? Should you allow the team on the third base side go out with their brightly colored uniforms to make the fielders think a runner is going home, trying to draw a throw home so the actual runners can advance to second and third? "Oh sorry...I was just running onto the field to get a bat, but I thought it would be fun to get close to the baseline first. I swear to god I didn't mean to make the fielders think I was a runner running home! Honestly!"
@@MJHBaseball You can definitely make a case that his presence confused the catcher. Play must be dead if the on deck batter is walking onto the field and getting ready to hit. Especially to a kid? Pretty confusing. Rule 3-23: No offensive team personnel, other than the base coach, shall be near a base for which a runner is trying so that a fielder may be confused, nor be on or near the baseline in such a way as to draw a throw, nor shall the base coach or members of the team at bat fail to vacate any area needed by a fielder in his attempt to put out a batter or runner,
I played High School and College ball, but years before that was Little League. Had this happened to our team we would have considered the play over and therefore we would have stomped the cheating player after the game. We could be beaten, but if we felt cheated, we won every time.
How is it cheating if its by the rules? Your ignorance to the rule doesn't make it cheating. It makes the other team/coaches/players more informed than you are. You are literally what's wrong with the game today.
@@adamwarren1918 Try to remain calm, they are talking about making a league just for Transvestites to play, so you will be able to play ball, and with Sissies that will not say anything to upset you. Good Luck!
@@ericbarnes3829 How does it feel to have peaked in stature at high school? Did you make it all the way through college? Were the math courses too hard for you? Enjoy the rest of your mediocre life.
WTH? Are you kidding? The Little League rules specifically say that THAT player is the one who needs to get the bat. He's doing his job and following the rules as stated. Bat Boys are not allowed in Little League, but in MLB you see this same thing only it's the guy with BB on his back.
@@MJHBaseball NOT by a secondary player from the bench UNTIL play is stopped or time out called. Batboys or Batgirls included entering the official field of play. Just as the rule for throwing a bat constitutes an out...the same should apply here.
@@mikesherrett8928 you are entirely ignorant of the rules. The next hitter or on-deck hitter retrieves the bat while the ball is live in every level of baseball, and throwing the bat is not generally an out unless the thrown bat strikes the ball or interferes with a player making a play.
Are there bat boys or not? Are there rules when a bat can be retrieved? If no bat boys, then a player entered the field of play who was not at bat, was not the next batter up, and was not replacing a runner. There is a rule of WHERE players have to be.
That is very common in pretty much all youth baseball and doesn't impact any play. There is nothing wrong with doing it. Now, if that player interferes with a play, that's another story. That obviously wasn't the case here.
yet it is a thing that was neither requested nor called... fun fact (which is actually a fact, unlike most times when someone starts by saying "fun fact"): if F2 had asked for time and then gone and talked to his coach in the dugout, that would be properly charged as a mound visit.
good question. no. it had nothing to do with the batter or any action caused by the batter. it'd be in the same category as a run scored on a wild pitch, passed ball, or fielding error. See the first sentence of OBR 9.04: "A run batted in is a statistic credited to a *batter whose action at bat* *causes one or more runs to score,* as set forth in this Rule 9.04." [emphasis added]
There is no rule that prevents the runner in this game from stealing home. In softball if the pitcher has the ball in the circle the runner may not advance, but this is Little League baseball and there is no such rule. The rule you'd want to read is Rule 7.13.
Show me that rule, if the pitcher has the ball is on the pitcher plate and the catcher is in the ready position that's true. In this video he explained that and the catcher wasn't in the ready position.
Only true on Tuesday and Thursday night games when the opposing team name starts with a vowel. Also, free popcorn for everyone. Its in the rule book people! I swear it is!
What about when the offensive non-player (not on any base not next at bat) came into the field to pick up the bat. Wouldn't that close the play or be called interference/distraction?
Yes because the rules say only runners , batters and 9defense players are allowed on field during live play. The instant that player crossed into the field of play during live play he interfered. You can't go by the exact rule about play being live in one instance and not the other.
Edwin, that's what I thought. Because if the bat is dropped in the field of play or rolls into the field of play then it BECOMES part of the field of play. Only a player that is part of that play can move it. Meaning if the 'ballboy' or the next batter was into the field, while the play is live, and takes the bat from the field it would be interference. At least that's what I thought.
@@michealargyle1608 No. That is 100% not true. Of course if you want to claim this, then I'm sure you can site the rule. I'll save you the time. It doesn't exist. And you'll see this same thing in EVERY GAME played at every level.
@@michealargyle1608 One more thing. Foul territory is considered "the field of play." Until you reach "dead ball territory" usually that is beyond a fence, you have the active field of play. You're trying to claim "fair territory" is the "field of play." Again, players or designated bat boys are expected to retrieve bats just like this player did.
The pitcher is on the mound. If the pitcher is on the mound it should automatically pause the play. That’s a rule in Dixie youth baseball at least. I’m a umpire
I do not know Dixie Youth Baseball rules. But in Little League they can't advance "When the pitcher is in possession of the ball and in contact with the pitcher's plate, AND the catcher is in the catcher's box ready to receive delivery of the ball." The catcher was not in the catcher's box, so any runner is free to advance.
Look at 3:48. As soon as the offensive team had a player come into the field of play to retrieve the bat, it should have been a dead ball. The runner was stopped and standing on third. This was not the on deck batter.
That is not a thing. Players or batboys are always retrieving bats from the playing area (foul territory is also live play territory by the way). The only way an out can occur is if that person interferes, which they did not do. Not sure why people think this is or should be a thing? The ball is live and runners can do run if they so choose. And fielders can tag them out if they do. Umpires are not allowed to just call time for no reason. They are required to keep the ball live here.
Now what a minute…their player went on the field to retrieve a bat, how could time not have been called at that time, what a bunch of shit. That’s ridiculous 👎🏼👎🏼
@@MJHBaseball The rule book, the rule book, THE RULE BOOK. It's called the rubber you fucken child. You ever hear ANYONE in MLB refer to that as "the pitcher's plate?" I'll wait for some examples.................
@@jessewahwah Its official name is the "pitcher's plate", in every rule book, for every sanctioning body, including MLB. Try reading the rules on pitching. It is there many times. "The rubber" only gets an occasional mention in some of the comments. img.mlbstatic.com/mlb-images/image/upload/mlb/atcjzj9j7wrgvsm8wnjq.pdf
What also needs to be looked at is the actions of the umpire on other plays. Has he been calling time with being asked or as soon as the pitcher is back at the mound. I assume the Oregon coach noticed this like the commentator stated and took full advantage.
Of course the umpire isn't calling time after every play or when the pitcher is on the mound. You don't get to umpire at this level without knowing the basics of the job. Time should not be called without a specific justifiable reason. Umpires are taught to keep the play live as much as possible.
@@MJHBaseball I have seen many umpires automatically call time so there goes your "of course" statement and umpires are taught many things like a strike zone and screw that up often.
Ummm, That is not an issue and happens during pretty much every at bat where the ball is put in play. Bat boys can be on the field during live play, and are all the time, to retrieve a bat or other items. They, however, may not interfere, which obviously doesn't happen here. And yes, even on the fair territory of the field if that is where the bat landed.
@@dusterfreebottom My question was for Roofus. We obviously didn't have interference by the player who picked up the bat in this game, so which game is he watching? BTW, I was at this game.
dusterfreebottom, I did not say that he interfered, I said I would have argued that he interfered. Besides a player is not allowed to add confusion or deception knowingluy or unknowing and by him running into the field of play he could have been seen as the next player coming to bat and by crossing into the field of play the umpire should have called timeout in my opinion, no different than a coach crossing into fair territory during a live ball. Jeff Frese, I guess a sarcastic question deserves a halfway sarcastic reply. Obviously you were the only one watching the game, I was only watching one play.
This isn't softball. That is true in softball, not baseball. The ball is always live and anyone can run at anytime, unless the umpire specifically calls Time for a legitimate reason. Thanks for commenting.
@@galactic_clashx4056 then obviously, a situation like this never happened to you. Players on both teams just learned a lesson on one of the rules of LITTLE LEAGUE baseball.
@@kpro9560 so if this is the case then if a runner gets to second and then they forget call time I can tag them out if we haven’t gone to the next play
@@galactic_clashx4056 LOL ok whatever. You can make up any scenario to try to rationalize your opinion. The fact is, you didn't draft the rules of LITTLE LEAGUE baseball. I didn't draft those rules either. Take up your opinions and grievances about those rules with the governing body of LITTLE LEAGUE baseball.
I think the coach argued the wrong point. Unless I am mistaken, a player left the dugout and entered the field of play to retrieve a bat during live play. That is also not allowed and at that point it should have been a dead ball as soon as the offensive player entered the field of play to retrieve the bat during a live ball. All runners return. Again I could be wrong but this ic covered by a few different rules like interference by others connected with the team and who is allowed out of the dugout during live play etc.
That would not be true. In the MLB they have Bat Boys that do this during live play all the time. In Little League, Bat Boys are not permitted and so it's up to the next on-deck batter to get the bat, or a player not in the line up. Watch games live and you will see this after EVERY base hit. It doesn't always get shown on camera. But thanks for commenting.
The problem in this stems from the players being conditioned by the awful "baby" rules of little league. Put them in a real baseball league, like PONY, (one that follows middle school baseball rules) and they'll learn the game the right way, including that you assume the ball is always live... not this cringy stuff with no leadoffs, 60 ft bases & 46 ft mound... it's really embarrassing especially for the ones who are 12/13 yrs old
Lol! I played Pony and Dizzy Dean growing up and we did stuff like this constantly. As a pitcher, I was constantly reminded by my coach that the field is live, no matter what. This is why the hidden ball tricks work so well. Little league us a joke. Give them 90' bases, 60' mound, lead offs, and 350' fences and see how good they really are!
read a rulebook: "pitcher's plate" and "rubber" are used interchangeably. OBR uses "pitcher's plate" 41 times and "rubber" 30 times, while NFHS Baseball uses "pitcher's plate" 38 times and "rubber" only 13 times. "Pitcher's plate" is the proper term, while "rubber" is officially-accepted slang.
Should’ve been time. There was a player grabbing the bat from the field and the next batter was standing there waiting. I think blue had a brain fart there.
Then call for time if there should have been time. It's simple baseball. It doesn't matter if he's going to get the bat or not. The ball is still live.
Time is never called in baseball without a specific reason. Had the catcher asked for time, he might have been granted, although getting time called to go talk to the coach might cost them a mound visit. The coach doesn't have to go to the mound for that to be charged. Otherwise teams would call time and have the pitcher go to the dugout... A mound visit is any time the defense is granted time in order for the coach to consult with a fielder.
MJH-Baseball I feel you’re new to the sport or haven’t actually been in a position like this. So your credibility isn’t there especially when you’re biased.
@@michaeldow1592 Yes this is little league but it's at the highest level. Rules are rules. Know the rules you're playing by. It's a tight game. Anything goes.
That's good baseball and a coach or player that doesn't take advantage this way should probably not coach competitive ball anymore. But if you're talking about recreational ball with young kids just learning, you may be right; however, at some point teams need to take advantage of poor defensives or kids will never learn to play the game right.
You're the coach at third, you're one out from elimination, you've scouted your opponent's catcher going to the bench between plays. You have a chance to tie and possibly win the game and go to the Little League World Series - what are you going to do?? At this level (Regional) it is no longer learning the game, it is win or go home.
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This catcher, pitcher and for that matter players on both teams, just learned a lesson that is a part of little league baseball. To learn!
disagree. the purpose of little league is to win, at all cost, this is the only way we teach the younger generation
@@pOOL_pANTS I hope your being sarcastic. 🤔🤔🤔
Advice: NEVER leave your position until time is called
JeremyIsTheBoss reckball hahah
Goes for both fielders and base runners...
@@chrisvolnek6805 exactly
Ok but the pitcher was on the mound, after he’s on the rubber it’s a dead ball
This can be wrong in some situations. Like covering a base etc
The runner was two-thirds of the way home before the pitcher even noticed.
@9Blair, Even IF the pitcher had "noticed", so what? There wasn't a CATCHER for him to *throw to* at the time, and so (as the video made clear) that run was on the catcher rather than the pitcher.
Another lesson from this video is running to first base. The batter had a good chance of being safe but he stopped running momentarily.
that happens plenty in youth sports
@@critter2 it happens in MLB as well. I was a game where Brady Anderson and Delano Shields failed to fun out an infield batted ball on a wet field. Both would have been safe had the run to first. Both were out even though the fielder slipped and fell.
oh, by the way, that was the NorthWest Region Championship game. Idaho was one out from going to Williamsport; instead they let Oregon steal home to tie, and gave up another run as well to give Oregon the lead. Oregon held them in the bottom of the 6th, and went to Williamsport instead.
A very expensive lesson indeed.
gc.com/game-5d0d55082fb94c0001147951
Catcher learned a valuable lesson that day. I bet he doesn't do it again.
Catchers learn something new every game. From foul tips to calling time every time you move
I know a kid on the Idaho team. His name is Chris Reynalds. He is catcher, pitcher, and short stop.
my friend was the catcher at the time. That is kinda embarrassing tbh. he is such aa great kid though.
@@Mr-wj1xm he was on the 2018 team
Had this EXACT play in a high school game years ago. The defensive coach came unglued as his arguement was "the pitcher was in the circle." I asked him "what circle?" He stated once the pitcher has the ball in the dirt circle, the runners cannot advance. I simply explained to him if the ball is live, runner can advance. Eventually he just let it go....it was a head scratcher for me him trying to pass that off as his arguement.
I skipped the high school part. But I’ve had travel teams. Get mad about my rulings. Saying “in our league.” And I always say. “Well that’s cool that your league does that but here we have slightly different rules apparently. I suggest you read the rule book for each field you play at in the future to avoid these types of situations.” Normally gets them to shut up real quick. Had 1 guy ask for my bosses number. My boss then told me always eject someone who does that. But I didn’t because I wanted to hear him say not 2 mins later. “You were right”
That comes from the 8-10 yo divisions where if the pitcher is ready to pitch (not within the 'circle') runners cannot advance.
It's so much fun having to remind high school football coaches of the rule differences between their rules and the rules for college and pro's. My standard answer is, "That's a Saturday (or Sunday) rule, coach." The same sometimes applies to baseball, but not as often.
When the pitcher has the ball everyone knows play is over, it's unwritten rule like not shooting the basketball when you are ahead and the clock is winding down for the game to end, everyone quits playing, you don't just run in for a layup because no one is guarding you, it's understood.
@@tnoble "Unwritten rules" aren't rules. If you can't play by the ACTUAL rules, stay out of sports.
@@tnoble As soon as I hear "everyone knows" I assume it is another made rule of one of those baseball rules that everyone knows, but won't find it in a rule book. If it is an unwritten rule, then it isn't a rule.
This is why, when I managed Little League, I taught my players the rules AND, the little nuances like this. My players when on both, offense and defense, were ALWAYS aware of these things. You know what? My players were always highly aware of situations and looked for things like this. Other coaches in the league hated us because I taught my kids this. I wanted my players to be well rounded in the game strategy, as well as, the basics of playing the game.
Reminds me of a play in my little league days. I hit a double and came into second standing up just ahead of the tag. I look over and see the third baseman was not covering his base. When the second baseman threw the ball to the pitcher I took off for third. They was never a play there. I surprised them again and didn't stop at third, I ran home. The pitcher rushed the throw home and the catcher couldn't handle it. Catcher dropped the ball and I scored on a double.
"...without a compelling reason..." THANK YOU. i am so tired of players requesting "time" the instant a tag play is over, sometimes even before the safe/out call is rendered. another common request is when the ball is thrown in from the outfield to an infielder, even without a play. there is NO REASON (not even "compelling") to grant "time" in these circumstances, so i never do. i get grief from the coaches, but who cares. just stand up, or get the ball to the pitcher, and KEEP PLAYING...
Had a similar thing happen to me in highschool softball. My team faced a really good pitcher who had struck out all our batters the previous inning. Top of the line-up I went up to bat and managed to beat the throw to first. Next two batters were out, but I was on third because thank you to whoever invented stealing bases. Anyway--apparently the opponent team forgot that I was on base and thought there were three outs. The pitcher simply dropped the ball, the catcher and em started walking away and soon the rest of the team followed. I stood there confused for a few seconds because I knew there were only two outs then my coach screamed at me to run. The shortstop who was walking toward the dug out just stared at me confused as I walked over home plate. My only regret--not simply walking to the plate for the laughs XD
hey, that's my good friend and mentor at U1 and that tent out in left center with the LL logo on it is my house. I sure hope I get to visit my house this year.
well I guess that's that then... my "house" at Al Houghton Stadium will not be put up this year. A big loss for everyone but my daughter... "daddy, it's too hot.... daddy, baseball is boring... daddy, it takes too long between games..."
@@davej3781 U1 is a friend as well... Hello from D62!
@@Kevin-jy3uj if they actually let fans in to Al Houghton stadium this year, come to the D30 tent and say hi... I plan to be there most afternoons
@@davej3781 We will see... IF they let people in, I'll come see you @ D30 and you can come see us at the D62 tent!
Several of our friends are getting the opportunity of a lifetime... 2nd regional and or world series assignments! How cool is that?
@@Kevin-jy3uj yeah, I've heard the story, pretty cool for those guys. strange that we don't know if fans will be allowed 6 weeks from now, when everything else is already fully open with minimal precautions... hopefully they are re-evaluating as we get closer to the tournament.
I did something similar to this when I was 10 years old in kid pitch.
I was on 3rd after coming from 1st base off a double. The Catcher just gets up and walks out to the pitcher to talk (never called time). Had more than enough space to steal home, especially since no one was covering the bag at 3rd or home.
That play will ultimately be that coaches legend. He will always be that “ Knucklehead coach who was 1 out away from Going to the LLWS”. Every player and parent on that time will NEVER forget. That’s baseball for you. Any parent who had a kid go to a post season tournament will understand what I’m talking about.
Thanks for talking to my coach like that
😆😆😆😆😆
If u watch the ump at 3:45 u can see him get ready to put his mask on and doesnt.....he knew what was coming
Fun fact: first ever walk-off at the Twins new Target Field was on a wild pitch
That’s on the coach..... CMON MAN LOL😂😂 what we doing. Stop forming bad habits and tell the catcher to take the signs by home plate.
This is a very good video and one can learn a lot. As a Little League coach of several years, I would caution some of the comments you make about “the catcher inventing in a new way . . .” These kids are 12 year olds. Your comment borders on snarkiness. Save it for MLB players making millions.
I agree with you about comments made about youth players and that could have been said much better. Thanks for pointing it out.
@@MJHBaseball All good. Fun watching your high quality videos (content and production).
if the coach called time, they should have been called for a mound visit - calling the catcher over to the bench is the same thing
It sounds like they'd been making this same mistake the entire game, but nothing ever happened because there was no runner on third.
The coach does call time out , only the umpire can call time.
We pulled the exact play on a local little league powerhouse. I sent a kid home when the catcher walked to the dugout after collecting a ball that got away from him, without calling time. A sent the runner on 3rd. The coaches, players and fans were outraged. They were so upset they totally collapsed and we took that tournament. I ran into the ump that winter at a basketball tournament. He lives in that area and had his house egged that weekend.
Lots of people here seem to think that umpires are supposed to be stopping play for all kinds of extra stuff. The umpire isn't the 10th member of the defense. Time only gets called in a few specific instances. This isn't one of them. The ball is live. I kinda think the Idaho coach knew that too, but was fishing for anything he could get. I seriously doubt he makes it all the way to the northwest regionals without knowing the ball is live.
That's a very good point.
When the player walked onto the field to pick up the bat ump should have called time or made an interference call. If play was live that player isn't allowed on the field.
@@edwinhughes6493 I'm going to call you out every single time you make this stupid comment. you are wrong, dead wrong, stop saying this crap or cite the rule
@@davej3781 lol 😆
Our umps in 12u and 13u baseball call time after every play and the ball isn't live again until he points at the pitcher
That's all true.You don't stop playing until the ump calls time.Thats how I was tought to play and that's what I teach my kids.
You are right. The Umpire knew the rule. The 3rd base COACH knew the rule. And now players on both teams know the rule. That's part of what coaching little league is about. Teaching children how to play and the rules of their sport.
I couldn't agree more. Now, who should we find to teach spelling and grammar to your children?
ahhahahahahahahahahahah
by the way, when the catcher goes and talks to his coach, that can be a charged visit to the pitcher. he probably didn't ask for time trying to avoid it being a charged visit, and suffered the consequences
Man U just gave away my secret play
In softball the ball is dead when it hits the ground (hence, no stealing in softball)
HOWEVER, fastpitch softball is another animal. (If your daughter plays fastpitch the “animal” is punny) The rules are similar but very different.
Fastpitch is like baseball except everything moves faster and more fun to watch too.
Watch the umpires head. Starting @ 4:00, he knows what's about to happen.
Yes, he does. He spots the runner right as he leaves third base. (3:50) Way to be alert!
No that’s bs, umpire should have called time as soon as the orange team player came onto the field to grab the bat. As soon as someone out of play enters the playing field time must be called or interference issued. That coach could have won that argument if he questioned the bat boy running into the play.
Snoop Dogg you know chopper willie from blackwood
wrong
Snoop Dogg sorry for the irrelevant comments, I thought you were the real snoop
Prove it. Show me the rule from Little League which says something even remotely resembling the statement you made. I don't believe this is true.
He talking straight facts
I umpired for years and one thing I noticed way back when was LL players trying to act like MLB players. In and out of the box in between pitches. I had a dozen batters who held up their hand thinking they had time out. They did not. The other coach used this and had the pitcher throw easy strikes while the batters were out of the box. Adjusting gloves, wrist bands , etc. The home plate umpire controls the game. Not the coach, players or parents. Kids wearing expensive gear with a 300.00 bat and can't even hit the ball out of the infield. It is comical at times.
I agree with you about the rules, however, if I'm an umpire, I am calling time because I have a bat in the way at first and a player on the field retrieving the bat that is not the next batter up. I would have sent the player from third just like this coach did, I'm just saying...
Okay, just make sure if you do start to umpire that you learn the rules first. It's not appropriate to call time without a legitimate reason as the game of baseball is intended to be a live game. The bat retrieval is 100% within the rules and expectations. Little League specifically says this player who picks up the bat is supposed to do so and to do it in the way he does it.
@@MJHBaseball The legitimate reason is that the bat is in line from the pitcher to home plate. That technically creates a dangerous situation. But way to be a complete asshat in your response.
@@scottdaniels3947 that is not a legitimate reason to call time. the bat is part of the field. play on.
@@davej3781 the problem with your response is that a player that is not in play comes out and collects the bat. Making it a dead play in the eyes of the offense. Therefore, time should have been called.
@@scottdaniels3947 the problem with your response is that it is completely wrong in all rulesets. A player or other personel coming out of the dugout to pick up the bat while the ball is live is legal, normal and expected at all levels of baseball. It is truly confounding to ponder where so many people get this ridiculous notion.
at least I dont have to umpire little league and we have JBO instead which uses straight up high school rules with like 5 pages of modified rules that dont really change anything besides pitch count. Little League is like the worst form of baseball ever
Are you from Oregon too?
Littleleague is also nowhere near the level of most select teams.
you might not like it but with out it little kids wouldn’t have the opportunity to play and love the sport of baseball
Maybe the umpire should've called time when the player went on the field to retrieve the bat.
Great base running.
What about the extra player on the field retrieving the bat? Can the at bat team send multiple players onto the field of play at any time the ball is lve?
This is exactly what I was thinking.
@@tristanbrewer4523 the next on-deck hitter retrieving the bat while the ball is live is entirely normal at every level of baseball. I have no idea why everyone suddenly thinks this is somehow unusual or outside the rules.
@@davej3781 it was always the next batter that retrieved the bat when I played, never the double deck batter.
@@rhysfuuma4640 the next hitter may generally toss the bat away from the plate area, however the next on-deck hitter would be the one to actually pick it up and return it to the dugout. in little league it's fairly typical that the next on-deck hitter retrieves the bat entirely on his own (aka the hitter "in the hole"... I've never heard of "double deck batter" before in all my years playing, coaching and umpiring... I will assume it's a regional thing)
in any case, a player other than the next batter entering the field to retrieve the bat is entirely normal and legal, unless of course they interfere with a play, and there is no reason whatsoever for the umpire to call time because of it. any claim otherwise is absurd and ignorant.
Imagining manipulating the game so the pitcher isn't on the pitcher's mound and the catcher goes to the dugout to talk with the coach.
That's weird because I was attending a babe ruth tournament in Medford a couple of years ago and the umpire was calling all pitches that bounced in front of the plate a strike.
I wasn’t aware Angel Hernandez moonlighted in Little League. 😂
For all you girls softball fans this would be borderline look back rule. The reason it is borderline is because pitcher fake throws to third which negates the rule then you need to determine if pitcher an runner are reset long enough
Pitcher wasnt even looking anyhow.
"Any pitch that hits the dirt prior to reaching the catcher is generally considered a wild pitch.". Not if you played for me. My catchers were told that if they did not make a good effort to block such a pitch and it got by them I would score it a passed ball. Result? The number of wild pitches went way down to less than 10 the last year I coached HS baseball. None of that one handed Johnny Bench crap was allowed or tolerated. My catchers were also required to show up to practice 10 minutes early for the sole purpose of going thru drills designed to block pitches in the dirt.
Baseball managers don't get to decide how scorekeepers score the game...
@@Dynamice1337 I was the one who kept the scorebook. This was HS varsity baseball and I was the pitching\catching coach.
@@garygemmell3488 Ok, then you were scoring it wrong. It's fine to coach your catchers to make every effort to block every pitch regardless of how its scored, but there is a rulebook for a reason. That reason is consistency.
@@Dynamice1337 You so funny. I'm scoring it for MY team and no one else's. I will score it the way I see fit. I don't care whether you think it's wrong. I was consistent in how I applied the rule, to wit:
2-26 A passed ball is a pitch which the catcher fails to stop or control when he should have been able to do so with ORDINARY EFFORT, and which enables a runner including the batter-runner to advance.
2-41 A wild pitch is one which cannot be handled by the catcher with ORDINARY EFFORT.
Those are the HS rules concerning wild pitches and passed balls. The MLB rule is virtually the same. If my catcher made no effort, let alone an ordinary effort, on what could be a wild pitch I am not going to penalize my pitcher for the catcher's laziness. Especially when I know what my catcher is capable of. No effort is never ordinary effort.
@@garygemmell3488 That is correct for high school rules. OBR scores differently. In NFHS if the catcher could/should have blocked the pitch and not allowed a runner to advance, it's a passed ball. In OBR if the ball hits the dirt prior to reaching the glove of the catcher and a runner advances, it's a wild pitch.
That coach needs to worry about his players, not arguing with the umpire
This is no different than a runner on second taking a steal to 3rd because the 3rd baseman had either gotten pulled toward home, or just wasn't paying attention and came away from the bag. Just the same as if a runner takes his foot off the bag, and is immediately tagged out by the baseman who never through the ball back to the pitcher.
Why on earth are they all confused?!?! Waiting for time to be called is baseball 101.
they don't want to ask for time because it will more likely be a charged defensive visit if they ask for time. it looks like they'd gotten into a bad habit of sneaking in these little defensive conferences, and ultimately paid the price. I should ask my friend who was on that crew (U1) if they were doing that the whole game. I doubt I'd let the defense get away with that more than once. It's one thing if F2 takes a couple of steps away to quickly make sure he and his coach are on the same page, but here it looks like F2 walks all the way to the dugout fence... "Mike, that's a visit!"
But, giving up a run probably fixes up that bad habit quicker than whatever the umpire might do.
At 2:09 is that player allowed to be on the field to grab the bat during the play?
@@MeistGamingChannel Yes, he is allowed. Looks like he is going to be the batter "on-deck". If he interferes with the play, that is another matter.
little league players, particularly on defense, holding their hands out and shoulders shrugged. the telltale sign that they have messed up, they know it, and are looking for someone to excuse their lack of discipline. so here comes the head coach, knowing that he has to deal with the parents after the game, to put on a show. sad...
Is that wm clubhouse? I remember playing them last year
@LJ Gryphons why would I lie about that😂
just a curious question, how come the umpire didn't signal safe when he crossed the plate?
If it was not a close play, it seems normal to not display a runner is safe. For example, a hitter gets a single the first base ump does not signal safe. Only if an actual play for an out was done.
there was no play on the runner, so there was nothing to signal. signaling "safe" when a runner reaches a base with no play is a mark of the rank beginner umpire, who should certainly have no business on a LLWS Regional crew.
@@brianyoungberg9904 exactly. Even a play at first and the runner is safe by a few steps. They just put up the safe sign. You only voice a call when it's very close. On plays that are not close everyone knows the outcome so you just do the sign. This case there wasn't even a play. I would have signaled safe without a voice call but either or works here.
Maybe the coach thought time was called because one of the other team's players came on to the field to collect the bat? If time had not been called, that player had no business being in the field of play.
That player is required to get the bat. Batboys and batgirls are not allowed to be used. Teams on offense are required to retrieve the bat as needed. The bat was in fair territory, so he got it. If it's in foul territory, that is STILL THE FIELD OF PLAY. Location is irrelevant. TIME should never called in the situation seen in the video unless the umpire completely mess up.
the problem with softball and its more when they throw back to pitcher is when they run (legal) is most softball umpires call time, when shouldn't i don't grant time if not needed. rather bases or plate, or till ball is in circle than i grant time. if coach or player needed it.
Video starts @ 0:20
is there any rule for the bat boy running into the infield during play?
he's not the bat boy, LL doesn't have bat boys, he's the next on-deck hitter and he's doing what he's supposed to do
Honestly though...offensive player who are in no way connected to the play shouldn't be allowed to walk onto the field in fair territory for ANY reason. That should automatically declare the play dead. One could argue the bright orange uniforms was a distraction to the fielders.
That is common practice at EVERY level of baseball. You may not see it on camera, but if you attend any level game, you will always see non-active players retrieving the bat from wherever it is located even during an active play.
@@MJHBaseball Sure...but when there is a play like this, that should be the risks you take in that it couild cause you to lose out by doing it. And honestly...it really DOESN'T happen very often. You don't generally see players TOTALLY not in the play (;even the on-deck batter) walking onto the field before the play is over, other than a game winning home run to congratulate the runner. But that is a dead ball. And should never. If you are in a league where players not in the play are running onto the field, you should tell them to stop. There is NO reason to do it. And they could get hurt since they are an unexpected presence on the field. You sure as hell don't see MLB players just wandering onto the field during a live ball to retrieve a bat. The umpires will often do that if the bat is in the way on a play that takes a long time to finish up. But even if the umpire doesn't, the on deck batter doesn't actually cross into fair territory to do so. They are usually standing on the first base side of home plate to give the runner trying to score a signal to slide or not.
How far do you want to take that? Should you allow the team on the third base side go out with their brightly colored uniforms to make the fielders think a runner is going home, trying to draw a throw home so the actual runners can advance to second and third? "Oh sorry...I was just running onto the field to get a bat, but I thought it would be fun to get close to the baseline first. I swear to god I didn't mean to make the fielders think I was a runner running home! Honestly!"
@@MJHBaseball You can definitely make a case that his presence confused the catcher. Play must be dead if the on deck batter is walking onto the field and getting ready to hit. Especially to a kid? Pretty confusing.
Rule 3-23: No offensive team personnel, other than the base coach, shall be near a base for which a runner is trying so that a fielder may be confused, nor be on or near the baseline in such a way as to draw a throw, nor shall the base coach or members of the team at bat fail to vacate any area needed by a fielder in his attempt to put out a batter or runner,
Time may NOT have been called so that's on the defense, but exactly how long was the ump going to wait to CALL time?
Why would the umpire call time at all on this play?
Until a coach or player calls time as explained in the video
Only time an ump would call it on his own would be because of injury, otherwise, it has to be asked for and granted if the ump seems fit.
I did the same thing catcher decided to take helmet off and I stole home
Because the orange team ran out early to grab a bat some umpires may call him out
Only umpires that don't know what they are doing.
For what?
I played High School and College ball, but years before that was Little League. Had this happened to our team we would have considered the play over and therefore we would have stomped the cheating player after the game. We could be beaten, but if we felt cheated, we won every time.
How is it cheating if its by the rules? Your ignorance to the rule doesn't make it cheating. It makes the other team/coaches/players more informed than you are. You are literally what's wrong with the game today.
@@adamwarren1918 Try to remain calm, they are talking about making a league just for Transvestites to play, so you will be able to play ball, and with Sissies that will not say anything to upset you. Good Luck!
@@ericbarnes3829 How does it feel to have peaked in stature at high school? Did you make it all the way through college? Were the math courses too hard for you? Enjoy the rest of your mediocre life.
The ump should have sent the kid back to 3rd after he crossed home plate and told him play was dead
@@tnoble why would play be dead? what rule would make play dead here?
THE PLAYER PICKING UP THE BAT SHOULD HAVE BEEN CALLED FOR INTERFERENCE AS WELL AS TOO MANY PLAYERS ON THE FIELD AS THE RUNNER WAS ADVANCING.
WTH? Are you kidding? The Little League rules specifically say that THAT player is the one who needs to get the bat. He's doing his job and following the rules as stated. Bat Boys are not allowed in Little League, but in MLB you see this same thing only it's the guy with BB on his back.
@@MJHBaseball NOT by a secondary player from the bench UNTIL play is stopped or time out called. Batboys or Batgirls included entering the official field of play. Just as the rule for throwing a bat constitutes an out...the same should apply here.
Okay. But you are wrong.
@@mikesherrett8928 you are entirely ignorant of the rules. The next hitter or on-deck hitter retrieves the bat while the ball is live in every level of baseball, and throwing the bat is not generally an out unless the thrown bat strikes the ball or interferes with a player making a play.
Are there bat boys or not? Are there rules when a bat can be retrieved? If no bat boys, then a player entered the field of play who was not at bat, was not the next batter up, and was not replacing a runner. There is a rule of WHERE players have to be.
That is very common in pretty much all youth baseball and doesn't impact any play. There is nothing wrong with doing it. Now, if that player interferes with a play, that's another story. That obviously wasn't the case here.
No such rule.
Life lesson here...get your heads out of your @$$e$, guys.
Was the catcher asking for time around 2:45?
On the mound that is
There is a thing called time...
yet it is a thing that was neither requested nor called... fun fact (which is actually a fact, unlike most times when someone starts by saying "fun fact"): if F2 had asked for time and then gone and talked to his coach in the dugout, that would be properly charged as a mound visit.
In little league the play dies once everyone is on a bag and the pitcher is on the mound which all of that was true lmao
According to what rule?
Did you not pay attention? Play is ALWAYS live, and runners can't advance if the pitcher is on the pitching plate AND the catcher is in his box.
Now, is this an RBI for the batter?
good question. no. it had nothing to do with the batter or any action caused by the batter. it'd be in the same category as a run scored on a wild pitch, passed ball, or fielding error.
See the first sentence of OBR 9.04:
"A run batted in is a statistic credited to a *batter whose action at bat*
*causes one or more runs to score,* as set forth in this Rule 9.04." [emphasis added]
The pitcher had the ball in the glove on the mound
There is no rule that prevents the runner in this game from stealing home. In softball if the pitcher has the ball in the circle the runner may not advance, but this is Little League baseball and there is no such rule. The rule you'd want to read is Rule 7.13.
Catcher ALSO has to be in his box. It's explained in the video.
That would also be interference because a player not aloud to move a bat when the ball still in play
That is not true.
No such rule.
The rules say if the pitcher has the ball the play is over.
Show me that rule, if the pitcher has the ball is on the pitcher plate and the catcher is in the ready position that's true. In this video he explained that and the catcher wasn't in the ready position.
No such rule.
Only true on Tuesday and Thursday night games when the opposing team name starts with a vowel. Also, free popcorn for everyone. Its in the rule book people! I swear it is!
Sco Sprague!
What about when the offensive non-player (not on any base not next at bat) came into the field to pick up the bat. Wouldn't that close the play or be called interference/distraction?
No
Yes because the rules say only runners , batters and 9defense players are allowed on field during live play. The instant that player crossed into the field of play during live play he interfered. You can't go by the exact rule about play being live in one instance and not the other.
Edwin, that's what I thought. Because if the bat is dropped in the field of play or rolls into the field of play then it BECOMES part of the field of play. Only a player that is part of that play can move it. Meaning if the 'ballboy' or the next batter was into the field, while the play is live, and takes the bat from the field it would be interference. At least that's what I thought.
@@michealargyle1608 No. That is 100% not true. Of course if you want to claim this, then I'm sure you can site the rule. I'll save you the time. It doesn't exist. And you'll see this same thing in EVERY GAME played at every level.
@@michealargyle1608 One more thing. Foul territory is considered "the field of play." Until you reach "dead ball territory" usually that is beyond a fence, you have the active field of play. You're trying to claim "fair territory" is the "field of play." Again, players or designated bat boys are expected to retrieve bats just like this player did.
is it normal that in my LL u can lead ofrf
If you're playing in intermediate, junior or senior divisions, then yes you can lead off
The pitcher is on the mound. If the pitcher is on the mound it should automatically pause the play. That’s a rule in Dixie youth baseball at least. I’m a umpire
I do not know Dixie Youth Baseball rules. But in Little League they can't advance "When the pitcher is in possession of the ball and in contact with the pitcher's plate, AND the catcher is in the catcher's box ready to receive delivery of the ball." The catcher was not in the catcher's box, so any runner is free to advance.
Look at 3:48. As soon as the offensive team had a player come into the field of play to retrieve the bat, it should have been a dead ball. The runner was stopped and standing on third. This was not the on deck batter.
That is not a thing. Players or batboys are always retrieving bats from the playing area (foul territory is also live play territory by the way). The only way an out can occur is if that person interferes, which they did not do. Not sure why people think this is or should be a thing? The ball is live and runners can do run if they so choose. And fielders can tag them out if they do. Umpires are not allowed to just call time for no reason. They are required to keep the ball live here.
Now what a minute…their player went on the field to retrieve a bat, how could time not have been called at that time, what a bunch of shit. That’s ridiculous 👎🏼👎🏼
If you don’t know the rules, then turn to profanity. That will win your argument every time.
Every baseball kid 🤷🏻♂️
I can’t listen to his opinion when he doesn’t know what the pitchers mound is.
?
Go Sprague I play
Pitchers plate?
Yes, its a pitchers plate.
While "the rubber" is a common term, its official name is "pitcher's plate". See any rule book diagram of the field of play.
The coach is right though
No he's not
In a younger age bracket, maybe. In FP softball, definitely. Here, no. Not even close.
The offensive coach? Absolutely he is right, even got a run out of it.
Defensive? Not so much...
Bad coaching he was trying to get the throw down signs or instructions
This video could be so much shorter
Wtf is a pitchers plate
Read a rule book sometime.
@@MJHBaseball The rule book, the rule book, THE RULE BOOK. It's called the rubber you fucken child. You ever hear ANYONE in MLB refer to that as "the pitcher's plate?" I'll wait for some examples.................
@@jessewahwah
Rubber is slang for pitchers plate
@@fjg8340 Still waiting........
@@jessewahwah Its official name is the "pitcher's plate", in every rule book, for every sanctioning body, including MLB. Try reading the rules on pitching. It is there many times. "The rubber" only gets an occasional mention in some of the comments. img.mlbstatic.com/mlb-images/image/upload/mlb/atcjzj9j7wrgvsm8wnjq.pdf
First rule of baseball: if you snooze...you lose.
What also needs to be looked at is the actions of the umpire on other plays. Has he been calling time with being asked or as soon as the pitcher is back at the mound. I assume the Oregon coach noticed this like the commentator stated and took full advantage.
Of course the umpire isn't calling time after every play or when the pitcher is on the mound. You don't get to umpire at this level without knowing the basics of the job. Time should not be called without a specific justifiable reason. Umpires are taught to keep the play live as much as possible.
@@MJHBaseball I have seen many umpires automatically call time so there goes your "of course" statement and umpires are taught many things like a strike zone and screw that up often.
If an umpire was calling time willy-nilly in any game I was involved in, I'd be out there asking why he's trying to be the 10th member of the defense
@@denniswebb341 In what league, and/or age bracket, and under what rules?
He said pitchers plate
That is what it is called.
MJH-Baseball no it’s not is called a pitchers mound or pitcher rubber
Try reading any baseball rule book and then see if you still feel that way.
Michael Beastmode91 that’s slang. It’s officially a plate.
Bat boy entered field of play-----Ump should have stopped play---runner returns to 3rd.
Poor umpiring and poor reporting in this vid.
Ummm, That is not an issue and happens during pretty much every at bat where the ball is put in play. Bat boys can be on the field during live play, and are all the time, to retrieve a bat or other items. They, however, may not interfere, which obviously doesn't happen here. And yes, even on the fair territory of the field if that is where the bat landed.
I would have argued interference when the player crossed into fair territory to pick up the bat.
How did he interfere?
What game are you watching?
@@backpacker57 The regional tournament game
@@dusterfreebottom My question was for Roofus. We obviously didn't have interference by the player who picked up the bat in this game, so which game is he watching? BTW, I was at this game.
dusterfreebottom, I did not say that he interfered, I said I would have argued that he interfered. Besides a player is not allowed to add confusion or deception knowingluy or unknowing and by him running into the field of play he could have been seen as the next player coming to bat and by crossing into the field of play the umpire should have called timeout in my opinion, no different than a coach crossing into fair territory during a live ball.
Jeff Frese, I guess a sarcastic question deserves a halfway sarcastic reply. Obviously you were the only one watching the game, I was only watching one play.
I guarantee the catcher is the coaches son. Bad coaching
Doh
why did the bat boy get the bat when it was live ball
Because that is his job.
Fun fact: The pitcher put his foot on the rubber therefore the play is dead
Even more fun fact. That is not the case. Rule 7.13 is the Little League Rule. Check it out and see why the runner could steal home in this situation.
Waa wha happened😂
Time is called everytime someone hits a foul ball that's not caught
The call is "Foul", or "Foul Ball", and the play is dead. No umpire shouts "Time!" on a foul ball.
I’m confused because if the out was recorded and the ball was handed back to the pitcher time is practically automatically called so I don’t get it???
This isn't softball. That is true in softball, not baseball. The ball is always live and anyone can run at anytime, unless the umpire specifically calls Time for a legitimate reason. Thanks for commenting.
@@MJHBaseball I don’t remember that
@@galactic_clashx4056 then obviously, a situation like this never happened to you. Players on both teams just learned a lesson on one of the rules of LITTLE LEAGUE baseball.
@@kpro9560 so if this is the case then if a runner gets to second and then they forget call time
I can tag them out if we haven’t gone to the next play
@@galactic_clashx4056 LOL ok whatever. You can make up any scenario to try to rationalize your opinion. The fact is, you didn't draft the rules of LITTLE LEAGUE baseball. I didn't draft those rules either. Take up your opinions and grievances about those rules with the governing body of LITTLE LEAGUE baseball.
I think the coach argued the wrong point. Unless I am mistaken, a player left the dugout and entered the field of play to retrieve a bat during live play. That is also not allowed and at that point it should have been a dead ball as soon as the offensive player entered the field of play to retrieve the bat during a live ball. All runners return. Again I could be wrong but this ic covered by a few different rules like interference by others connected with the team and who is allowed out of the dugout during live play etc.
That would not be true. In the MLB they have Bat Boys that do this during live play all the time. In Little League, Bat Boys are not permitted and so it's up to the next on-deck batter to get the bat, or a player not in the line up. Watch games live and you will see this after EVERY base hit. It doesn't always get shown on camera. But thanks for commenting.
You can see the kid who comes on to the field to grab the bat which means the lay is dead
Ahhhhh, nope.
The problem in this stems from the players being conditioned by the awful "baby" rules of little league. Put them in a real baseball league, like PONY, (one that follows middle school baseball rules) and they'll learn the game the right way, including that you assume the ball is always live... not this cringy stuff with no leadoffs, 60 ft bases & 46 ft mound... it's really embarrassing especially for the ones who are 12/13 yrs old
Lol! I played Pony and Dizzy Dean growing up and we did stuff like this constantly. As a pitcher, I was constantly reminded by my coach that the field is live, no matter what. This is why the hidden ball tricks work so well.
Little league us a joke. Give them 90' bases, 60' mound, lead offs, and 350' fences and see how good they really are!
@@charlieodom9107 they do... it's called "Junior Division"
@@davej3781 🤣 got em
L
The pitcher's plate? How about the rubber.
read a rulebook: "pitcher's plate" and "rubber" are used interchangeably. OBR uses "pitcher's plate" 41 times and "rubber" 30 times, while NFHS Baseball uses "pitcher's plate" 38 times and "rubber" only 13 times. "Pitcher's plate" is the proper term, while "rubber" is officially-accepted slang.
Should’ve been time. There was a player grabbing the bat from the field and the next batter was standing there waiting. I think blue had a brain fart there.
Then call for time if there should have been time. It's simple baseball. It doesn't matter if he's going to get the bat or not. The ball is still live.
Time is never called in baseball without a specific reason. Had the catcher asked for time, he might have been granted, although getting time called to go talk to the coach might cost them a mound visit. The coach doesn't have to go to the mound for that to be charged. Otherwise teams would call time and have the pitcher go to the dugout... A mound visit is any time the defense is granted time in order for the coach to consult with a fielder.
@@MJHBaseball agreed. What I meant was as the player in the field call time if you want time. Whether it's granted or not is a different story.
Jared Schroeder I can tell you’ve never played baseball competitively. I don’t expect you to understand or know what’s going on.
MJH-Baseball I feel you’re new to the sport or haven’t actually been in a position like this. So your credibility isn’t there especially when you’re biased.
That’s cheap. You got the bat boy out there and the other batter near the plate. That’s just the coach being dirty.
Know the rules and call time. Tight game, anything goes.
Jared Schroeder it’s little league. You got his bat boy in front of the plate. That’s cheap bro.
@@michaeldow1592 Yes this is little league but it's at the highest level. Rules are rules. Know the rules you're playing by. It's a tight game. Anything goes.
That's bush league by the 3rd base coach. He knew play was over by gentlemen's rules. I'd be ashamed of my kids coach for pulling that crap
That's good baseball and a coach or player that doesn't take advantage this way should probably not coach competitive ball anymore. But if you're talking about recreational ball with young kids just learning, you may be right; however, at some point teams need to take advantage of poor defensives or kids will never learn to play the game right.
You're the coach at third, you're one out from elimination, you've scouted your opponent's catcher going to the bench between plays. You have a chance to tie and possibly win the game and go to the Little League World Series - what are you going to do?? At this level (Regional) it is no longer learning the game, it is win or go home.
baseball isnt played by gentlemans rules