“effected”?
“effected”?
It would be weird if WWE wasn’t trying to promote themselves as said bastion in recent years (anti-bullying campaigns, “HISTORIC” women’s matches (that have been done before previously), Finn Balor wearing rainbow gear while the announcers talk about how “Balor Club is for everyone”, etc.) which is why this event…
Keep in mind that the line is painted under a few inches of ice. This can cause, when viewing from an angle as we are in this shot, the parallax effect that “positions” the puck in such a way that it even creates the illusion of white space between the puck and the line, when in actuality what we’re seeing is the…
She doesn’t run more than three feet out of her base path (base path is established based on the runner’s position when the fielder makes a play, not the foul line), and you are allowed to overrun the plate so long as you immediately turn back to finish the play. At least that’s the baseball rulebook. I can’t imagine…
I may be way off (base) but I think out of the ‘baseline’ in this instance is if you go more than a certain number of feet (maybe 3') out of your way to avoid the tag.
God, Gladwell fucking sucks.
Just a note, and I saw that you explained this, but I’ll add a little clarity. The MIL (malfunction indicator lamp) comes on steady when your vehicle has the POTENTIAL to exceed 150% of the maximum allowable federal emissions. A flashing MIL is a warning of potential catalyst damage caused by a misfire. All OBD2 cars…
Passing vehicle more likely. A 20ft fall has a low risk of death
The infielder doesn’t need to make a “snap call” though, that’s the whole reason the rule exists. If the runners take any sort of significant lead at all, you catch it and double at least one of them off. If they stay at the base, you drop it for a double play.
Not sure you fully understand the infield fly rule... the batter will definitely be on first.
The infield fly rule only comes into effect when there are runners on first AND second [Edit: and fewer than two outs]. Which means there are two runners caught in the “do I run and get doubled off, or do I stay and get forced out” trap. The batter is not in that trap since he can only get forced out.
Pseudo-counter argument: any run that scores as a result of a pitcher’s error (fielding error, balk, wild pitch) should count as an earned run. You’re in control of the situation, it’s your earned run.
A handy balk flowchart in text form.
You steal on a 3-0 count because they’re not expecting it, and you steal at all because it’s a handy way to advance around the bases.
“ .... with Verlander behind White Sox catcher Omar Narvaez 3-0, Anderson took off for second. By an incredibly strict interpretation of baseball’s incredibly stupid and ridiculous unwritten rules, this could be considered a no-no—stealing base late in a blowout is considered bad form”
That’s not considered bad…
Hey, making dumb shit up is Shaughnessy’s gig. Stay in your lane Kev.
or Steve Rannazzisi
Look, if he’s so intent on “being there” even if he wasn’t there, let him make a movie like any other Wahlberg.
I had an unintentional “personal growth experience” once while slow-dancing with my prom date. It was super awkward because my mother was my prom date. And I was homeschooled.
Just burn the NCAA to the fucking ground already.