9.04.2008

That's a No on the No-No

no no-no for ccIn the bottom of the seventh inning of the Milwaukee Brewers' game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sunday, official scorer Bob Webb ruled Andy LaRoche's hit a single rather than an error.

Turns out, he was right.

Webb explained that when Brewers ace CC Sabathia tried to bare-hand LaRoche's soft grounder before dropping the ball, the runner was already 2/3 of the way down the first baseline, therefore ruling it a hit.

This became the difference between a no-hitter and a one-hitter, which is why the Brewers' so passionately lobbied for the ruling to be changed. However, MLB agreed with Webb, and after further review, the play stands.

The end.

[ESPN] | [The Fanhouse] | [Cute Sports]



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bullcrap.

charlestace said...

Not only was the runner going to beat the throw, but according to the rules, errors may be charged only on plays which could have been made "with normal effort." A running, barehanded pickup of grounder constitutes much more than "normal effort." So there is no way that batter could have been legally credited with a hit.

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