@MarkMcever@pherbert25@JomboyMedia My original point is that there is no “abandoning the play” situation. I don’t know how replay factors in to all this. I don’t know if missing is reviewable etc. thanks for the conversation
@MarkMcever@pherbert25@JomboyMedia It’s an interesting play with multiple possibilities. I assume the ump thought he touched the plate, so ruled that way. If he had seen him miss it, in the old days, he would make no signal, but I think they changed the mechanic to not “give it away” & they signal safe anyway. 1/2
@MarkMcever@pherbert25@JomboyMedia It’s the same as missing second or third. You’re assumed to have touched a base you passed, unless the defense appeals that you have missed it and the ump rules that you did.
Hey, @spencerpratt,
In Los Angeles, there are 2 types of “zombies”:
1) Drug addicts on the streets urinating and defecating.
2) Voters who step over them and keep voting for Democrats.
On the left is Spencer Pratt’s home. On the right is Jimmy Kimmel’s. Mr. Kimmel repeatedly violates FCC equal time election laws campaigning against Mr. Pratt on his late night political show. ABC’s defense is that Mr. Kimmel’s show is “comedy.”
They are also selling unicorns.
@OrelHershiser@Joe_Davis The runner is assumed to have touched the plate unless the defense appeals. Old mechanics would have ump make no call if he saw the miss, but that was changed to safe call to not give it away. Don’t think he saw the miss here.
When American POWs tried to sneak her notes with their personal information to tell their families they were still alive, she gave them to the North Vietnamese. Some of them were beaten to death. You are both commies and you can both fuck off.
An Inconvenient Truth for climate alarmists:
Al Gore’s dramatic climate warnings shaped a generation — but 20 years later, the data tell a very different story.
Climate-related deaths are down 97% over the past century, polar bears more than doubled since the 1960s, and global burned area has decreased by more than 25% over the past quarter century.
That's hardly a success of climate policy though: fossil fuels still provide 81% of world energy, emissions keep rising, and $16 trillion+ spent on green policies since Gore's movie came out hasn’t changed the trajectory.
A good reminder that panic is a terrible policy adviser.
https://t.co/PHVlqFB3Zg