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Black Cloud Hangs Over World Series

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Black Cloud Hangs Over World Series
Authored by Derek Bodner - 28th October, 2008 - 2:28 pm
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The missed calls and inconsistent strike zones have caused enough controversy in the 2008 World Series.

It was bad enough when fans could argue that Jimmy Rollins was, in fact, hit by that pitch in Game 2. Or, Jamie Moyer's flip to Ryan Howard did get there in time in Game 3. Or, Evan Longoria did make contact with Rollins before he got back to third base in Game 4.

Now add in the unpredictability of Mother Nature and the even more unpredictable Bud Selig, and you come up with a grand mess worse than the Citizens Bank Park infield.

Watching the game, it became clear the umpires were not going to call the game with the Phillies up 2-1. If the game was not able to resume, that could have forced Mother Nature to prematurely end the World Series with a Phillies' win.

The umpires waited; the Rays tied the game; and the game was immediately postponed.

Prior to 2007, if the visiting team scored in the top of an inning and the home team did not get to finish out the bottom half, and the game met the conditions to become official; the score was reverted back to the end of the last full inning, should it be called. On Monday night, that would have resulted in a Philadelphia victory, and a World Series title.

Under the current rules, a tie game, even one mid-inning, can be resumed at a later date.

After the game, Selig stated that Major League Baseball would have postponed the game even if the Rays were trailing.

"We'd have sat here," Selig said. "The game would have been in a rain delay until the weather conditions allowed us to continue. And that could have been 24 hours or 48 hours or whenever."

Not only is that interesting because it was evident the umpires became much more receptive to delaying the game once the score became tied but also because it is not allowed by Major League Baseball Rule (Section 4.12).

"I have to use my judgment here," Selig said. "This is not a way to end the World Series."

The game, and thus the World Series, absolutely should not have ended prematurely due to weather, that is likely something everyone can agree on. It's hard to fathom even title-starved Philadelphia fans wanting to win that way.

That being said, this is something that needs to be in the rulebooks. We all agree that World Series games should not end due to weather, so why not make it official that all World Series games will be played for the full nine innings, regardless of whether they are resumed from a tie game or not, half inning or full?

Why try to force a half inning on a field that clearly was not playable, when it became obvious the game was not capable of being finished?

Why does it feel like the commissioner is making up the rules as he goes?

Ultimately, the remainder of Game 5 will be played in Philadelphia. We just aren't exactly sure when.

Until then, the Rays will have to find new shelter for the night sincethe team did not have reservations, and the hotel they were staying at was fully booked.

It's difficult to imagine things getting any stranger.


Derek Bodner: dbodner22@gmail.com
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