Clipping:Rejecting official scoring rules
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Date | Saturday, April 15, 1882 |
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Text | [from answers to correspondents] Why doesn’t The Clipper in its baseball scores observe Rule 70 Sec 6, second paragraph of the Playing Rules, which says that the pitcher should be credited with an assist when a man on the opposite side strikes out? ... The Clipper has its own scoring rules, and abides by them. To give the pitcher credit for fielding assistance in case of outs on strikes is to render it impossible to obtain data for judging his skill as a fielder in his position. Assistance on strikes belongs entirely to the pitching, and is shown by the figures of “struck out” given in The clipper scores. The League rules govern League clubs, and nothing else, as far as scoring is concerned. |
Source | New York Clipper |
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Submitted by | Richard Hershberger |
Origin | Initial Hershberger Clippings |
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