I've watched this play 40 times now. Play starts at .31 seconds.
I don’t say this in a braggedocious way. But it’s true. I’ve been right about everything.
-Donald J Trump
-9/22/2025
-Donald J Trump
-9/22/2025
agsalaska said:
There is no baseline between first and second.
phatty26 said:
Out but who knows this day and age. Basketball has evolved into whatever you want to do is legal now is baseball heading that way soon.
HoustonAg12 said:
The baseline is established when the fielder has the ball. If you slow it down, once the fielder has the ball the runner proceeds about 5-6 feet to his right. I think you have a couple feet cushion but not that much. Should have been called out
WallyWonka said:agsalaska said:
There is no baseline between first and second.
It's called base path between first and second base and second and third base.
"MLB Rule 5.09(b)(1) Avoiding a Tag
Rule 5.09(b)(1) in Major League Baseball states that a runner is out if they run more than three feet away from their base path to avoid being tagged, unless they are avoiding interference with a fielder."
Based on the video, the runner clearly knew he was going to be out if he continued running in the base path and intentionally ran out of the base path.
I didn't hear from the video, was this not reviewable?
AgRyan04 said:
What caused this change in what a baseline was? It feels like this has just been a thing for the last 5-10 years.....before thst you ran from point a to point b.....is it a player safety thing gone off the rails?
john2002ag said:
It is 3 feet in total. That means that once the basepath is established, you have 18 inches either way.
agsalaska said:WallyWonka said:agsalaska said:
There is no baseline between first and second.
It's called base path between first and second base and second and third base.
"MLB Rule 5.09(b)(1) Avoiding a Tag
Rule 5.09(b)(1) in Major League Baseball states that a runner is out if they run more than three feet away from their base path to avoid being tagged, unless they are avoiding interference with a fielder."
Based on the video, the runner clearly knew he was going to be out if he continued running in the base path and intentionally ran out of the base path.
I didn't hear from the video, was this not reviewable?
The base path is not established until there is a tag attempt or moving towards the runner to make a tag attempt.
That last part was a modification to help a pickle if the runner is being chased and does not run towards a base. But it applies here.
Is he still out?
AggieBand2004 said:
Three feet in total or three feet in any direction, before or at the time of an attempted tag, yadda yadda... no matter how you describe it, this runner clearly departed from his basepath way more than he should have.
How umps at any level could get this one wrong is surprising.
Quote:
"The runner has the right to establish his basepath, and so Clement had established his basepath to avoid the fielder from potential interference," Lentz told a pool reporter. "Even though Henderson reached out for a tag, Clement's basepath was already established out there, going to the second base, so therefore it was not out of the baseline
agsalaska said:
There is no baseline between first and second.
aggielax48 said:
I can't see how this isn't an out. As soon as Gunnar was running towards him with the ball he was attempting to tag. The base path is then established toward 2nd base, not into the outfield. I have out of the base path and an out.
john2002ag said:
It is 3 feet in total. That means that once the basepath is established, you have 18 inches either way.