If she ever undressed in front of me it would be a reenactment of the American Pie scene with Kevin & Nadia.
fifyDavid_Puddy said:
If she ever undressed in front of me it would be a reenactment of the American Pie scene withKevinJim & Nadia.
dude is a mvp allstar, world series champ and was in the hr derby, I think he is already at that superstar level88jrt06 said:
Bregman's a sharp dude and has some interesting family connections.
Not yur tipicul jock!
Also, good chance to become our next legit superstar, IMO.
And, like me, he mastered using f___ as an adverb, verb, adjective, proper name, insult, noun and complement!
Takes years of study. But that's how competitors compete. Gotta love the Breg-man.
MAS444 said:
There's no question the fan touched the ball with his glove.
From the wording of the rule:David_Puddy said:MAS444 said:
There's no question the fan touched the ball with his glove.
Yes it did, but that was going to be an awfully difficult catch to make. Not sure how they determined he would have made it
Yes, it would have. Bud Black challenges that no matter what the jersey of the doofus with a glove has on, and the challenge lasts no more than a few seconds, just like it did last night.JJxvi said:
It wouldnt have been overturned if it wasnt a jackass in an Astros jersey.
88jrt06 said:
Might want to check lifetime stats on that one. Huge Breggo fan, but he is not a legit MLB superstar yet. No way.
He hasn't had time, yet. Damn sure on the right track, though, and pulling for him. All the tools!
Well since you said check the stats, see if you can guess these 3 guys88jrt06 said:
Might want to check lifetime stats on that one. Huge Breggo fan, but he is not a legit MLB superstar yet. No way.
He hasn't had time, yet. Damn sure on the right track, though, and pulling for him. All the tools!
Fun with semantics! Breg has been on FIRE since before all-Star break, like superstar-LEVEL play.Ferris Wheel Allstar said:dude is a mvp allstar, world series champ and was in the hr derby, I think he is already at that superstar level88jrt06 said:
Also, good chance to become our next legit superstar, IMO.
Leave that **** outta here. Harden wised up, so should you.RK said:
i don't think you're really technically a superstar until you start dating a kardashian or similar.
Semantics my ass. He has been playing at a high level since last years all star game when whatever chode called him out on twitter. His career stats averaged out over 162 game season is comparable to 2 of the all time greats at 3B. He was the 2nd pick in the draft, climbed his way to the majors in a year, and is an all star mvp in his 2nd full season.88jrt06 said:Fun with semantics! Breg has been on FIRE since before all-Star break, like superstar-LEVEL play.Ferris Wheel Allstar said:dude is a mvp allstar, world series champ and was in the hr derby, I think he is already at that superstar level88jrt06 said:
Also, good chance to become our next legit superstar, IMO.
So we can agree, finally. Stretches of superstar-LEVEL play from Bergman. He could become a superstar.
But he hasn't, yet...in his less than 2 full seasons.
The Wonderer said:Leave that **** outta here. Harden wised up, so should you.RK said:
i don't think you're really technically a superstar until you start dating a kardashian or similar.
The real "from the wording of the rule" is not what you put in quotation marks for some reason...Anagrammatic Nudist said:From the wording of the rule:David_Puddy said:MAS444 said:
There's no question the fan touched the ball with his glove.
Yes it did, but that was going to be an awfully difficult catch to make. Not sure how they determined he would have made it
"If the umpire judges that the fielder could have caught the ball over the field (i.e., the ball would have not crossed over the plane of the wall), he will rule the batter out on spectator interference."
"Could" is much different than "would". If there is any doubt whatsoever whether or not he could have caught it, the ruling is going to favor the fielder 100 times out of 100 times in this scenario, as it should. Don't hate the rule, hate the glove-toting "adult" in the outfield.
The wording used in the approved rulings and example situations is "clearly prevents" ("plainly prevent" is also used just to be as confusing as possible) which honestly is a wording that can be interpreted as either your "could" or as your "would"Quote:
Rule 6.01(e)
(e) Spectator Interference
When there is spectator interference with any thrown or batted ball, the ball shall be dead at the moment of interference and the umpire shall impose such penalties as in his opinion will nullify the act of interference.
APPROVED RULING: If spectator interference clearly prevents a fielder from catching a fly ball, the umpire shall declare the batter out
No interference shall be allowed when a fielder reaches over a fence, railing, rope or into a stand to catch a ball. He does so at his own risk. However, should a spectator reach out on the playing field side of such fence, railing or rope, and plainly prevent the fielder from catching the ball, then the batsman should be called out for the spectator's interference.
EXAMPLE: Runner on third base, one out and a batter hits a fly ball deep to the outfield (fair or foul). Spectator clearly interferes with the outfielder attempting to catch the fly ball. Umpire calls the batter out for spectator interference. Ball is dead at the time of the call. Umpire decides that because of the distance the ball was hit, the runner on third base would have scored after the catch if the fielder had caught the ball which was interfered with, therefore, the runner is permitted to score. This might not be the case if such fly ball was interfered with a short distance from home plate.
So the umpire could have said I have no idea. Award bregman first base and compromise.JJxvi said:
Basically Bregman thinks he wouldnt have caught it and the Rockies thought he would have. The umpires and replay officials ended up agreeing with the Rockies, but according to the rules they were absolutely not required to make that ruling, they could have gone the other way. Its a matter of opinion with this rule, and IMO they probably would have sided with the Astros if the guy hadnt had a Verlander jersey on.
Quote:
However, should a spectator reach out on the playing field side of such fence, railing or rope, and plainly prevent the fielder from catching the ball, then the batsman should be called out for the spectator's interference.