Bill Lundstrom
Bill Lundstrom
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
But that's actually not true. The commissioner does indeed have the authority to rule retroactively and declare that the baserunner was out as of the moment the ball was caught.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
He was a safe baserunner at the moment he was called safe because the rules of baseball are that what an umpire calls is what has happened.
Selig has the power to overrule an umpire call and change the ruling, but he doesn't have the power to make it not have occurred. He can make the runner now be out. He can't make him have been out at the moment.
As for why I care what Selig does, I simply believe that record books should reflect what everyone understands reality to be to the greatest extent possible. Suppose it were determined that the holder of, say, the world record for women's weightlifting was actually a man. Wouldn't you want that removed from the record books? The whole point of keeping the record book is to keep track of which women lifted the most weights, and to facilitate comparative discussions of female weightlifters over time. Neither interest is served by retaining a phony "record" which never belonged in the first place. Or would you argue that the man was actually a woman as of the moment he recorded the record because that's what the weightlifting referee (or judge or whatever one calls them) presumed at the time?
at the risk of further thread drift, based on what you are saying here, you think some home run records should be erased from the record books?