At first glance
I thought Pete Kozma was slightly out of position.
Then on the
replay of the Hunter Pence's three-run, seeing-eye double in the bottom of the
third inning, I thought Kozma got a bad read on batted ball and broke the wrong
way, toward third, from his short stop position.
Neither of my
observations was correct.
As you can see
from the 5,000-frames-per-second super-slow-motion replay
and the MLB's
animated GIFs, Pence's bat hit the ball and broke. The severed portion of
Pence's bat slapped the ball twice more, the third time creating a hellacious
spin that sliced the ball slice from Kozma's glove.
"The read
I got was that it was going to the hole," Kozma said.
Three runs
scored on the play – the runner from first went home on center fielder Jon
Jay's throwing error – giving the Giants a commanding 5-0 lead over a Cardinals
team, whose hitters over the past three games, became very Yankee-esque.
Pence, whom we
learned yesterday rides to work 20-mph
on a motorized scooter, of course, didn't see or feel the bat break.
"That's
in super-slo-mo. I didn't even feel that," Pence noted. "You couldn't
see that with your eye. It broke my bat and I thought I had just stayed inside
it. I guess fate just found a way."
So, here's a
question… and I'm just thinking out loud here, but… if Major League Baseball
had a more extensive replay system, and let's say the Cardinals had coaches in
the booth or somewhere looking at the Fox broadcast replay, could the Cards'
Manager Mike Matheny had then, to borrow terminology and practice from the NFL,
tossed a challenging red flag out of the dugout?
I'm all for
replay in baseball, but I'm wondering if that's where we eventually want to go
with a replay system.
It turns out, as
my good friend (ok, I've never, ever met the guy) Tom
Verducci of Sports Illustrated explains, MLB rules would have upheld
Pence's triple-batted ball.
Verducci explains:
Rule 6.05 (h)
states that a batter is ruled out and the play is ruled dead with no
advancement by the runners when the batters hits a ball a second time in fair
territory. But the rule does include a comment specifically to address the
circumstance of a broken bat causing a double hit. It states, “if a bat breaks
and part of it is in fair territory and is hit by a batted ball or part of it
hits a runner or fielder, play shall continue and no interference called.”
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