Clipping:Duties of umpires: calling foul balls: Difference between revisions

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{{Clipping
{{Clipping
|Type of Date=Day
|Type of Date=Year
|Date=4/28/1866
|Date=1868/01/01
|Title=duties of umpires: calling foul balls
|Title=duties of umpires: calling foul balls
|Text=<p>He should call foul balls in a loud tone of voice, but not until the ball actually becomes a foul ball by touching the ground, the person of a player, or any other object behind the range of the home and first base and home a third base.  In cases of foul ball tipped, he may call them promptly as soon as struck; but when a ball rises in the air to the right or left, and presents the appearance of going either fair or foul, he should wait until the ball touches some object before he calls foul.  When a ball is fair he should keep silent.</p>
|Text=<p>He should call foul balls in a loud tone of voice, but not until the ball actually becomes a foul ball by touching the ground, the person of a player, or any other object behind the range of the home and first base and home a third base.  In cases of foul ball tipped, he may call them promptly as soon as struck; but when a ball rises in the air to the right or left, and presents the appearance of going either fair or foul, he should wait until the ball touches some object before he calls foul.  When a ball is fair he should keep silent.</p>
|Source=New York Clipper
|Source=New York Clipper
|Clipping Tags=Umpires and Umpiring, Fouls
|Warning=
|Comment=
|Query=
|Submitted by=Richard Hershberger
|Submitted by=Richard Hershberger
|Origin=Initial Hershberger Clippings
|Origin=Initial Hershberger Clippings
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 07:33, 13 March 2022

19C Clippings
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Date 1868
Text

He should call foul balls in a loud tone of voice, but not until the ball actually becomes a foul ball by touching the ground, the person of a player, or any other object behind the range of the home and first base and home a third base. In cases of foul ball tipped, he may call them promptly as soon as struck; but when a ball rises in the air to the right or left, and presents the appearance of going either fair or foul, he should wait until the ball touches some object before he calls foul. When a ball is fair he should keep silent.

Source New York Clipper
Tags Umpires and Umpiring, Fouls
Comment Edit with form to add a comment
Query Edit with form to add a query
Submitted by Richard Hershberger
Origin Initial Hershberger Clippings

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