The 2015 BRD: Baseball Rule Differences


Book Description

According to Referee Magazine, the BRD is an "essential book" for umpires. If you've ever owned one, you know how valuable it is. If you're a first-time buyer, my guarantee always stands: Get the book. If you don't like it, I'll refund your money and you can keep the book.This year's edition (the 32nd) contains almost 200 official interpretations from Hunter Wendelstedt and the staff of the Wendelstedt Umpire School. In all, the book has 578 "off interps" from recognized authorities in FED, NCAA, and OBR rules. An example: Awards are sometimes made from the time of the pitch, but the OBR doesn't define that. You need the BRD - just to be sure.This edition features 350 plays spread out over 579 sections and is the result of more than 500 hours of painstaking research and editorial revisions.With an alphabetical index and a citation index leading the way, you'll be far ahead of the other umpires in your association when you get this book.Happy reading. And happy research! To paraphrase a well-known pitchman: "You're gonna like the way you call."Carl (Papa C)




2016 BRD: Baseball Rule Differences


Book Description

The famous BRD. "Baseball Rules Differences." This is the 33rd, containing all differences among NFHS, NCAA, NAIA, OBR. 579 sections, 591 official interpretations, alphabetical index, rule book citations index. Completely revised to reflect the new OBR rule numbers. Money back if you're not satisfied, and you can keep the book.




The 2013 BRD: Baseball Rule Differences


Book Description

The 2013 BRD: This is the 30th edition of the book Referee Magazine called "essential." You'll find all the differences among National Federation, NCAA, NAIA, and Official Baseball Rules. Completely revised and updated, it's undergone a total overhaul, as repeat customers will immediately see. Nothing like it has ever been done. There's also a companion book called the EBRD, where the reference links are "hot." You'll find more information on the home page of the author's website, www.carlsbrd.comCarl's guarantee is: Buy the book. If you don't like it, he'll refund your money -- and you can keep the book.




The 2011 Brd


Book Description

“Referee Magazine” called “Baseball Rule Differences” an essential reference for any umpire working with more than one rulebook. It began in 1982 as a 40-page mimeographed document. Today, it's over 400 pages, containing 537 rule sections, 272 plays, 371 official interpretations, 58 authoritative opinion boxes, 1335 cross-references, and nearly 2500 rule citations.You know this book, of course, by its nickname: The BRD.Inside you'll find a complete discussion of all rule differences among the various codes: National Federation (high school), the NCAA and NAIA, and the Official Baseball Rules, used in professional baseball and serving as the basis for most youth baseball.All changes from the 2009 edition, published by Officiating.com, are clearly marked, including “changed rules,” editorial revisions, added notes, revised and expanded case rulings. In the two years since the last edition, baseball rules committees have made more significant changes than in any previous two-year period. If you don't own the 2011 BRD, you will face a daunting task as you try to harmonize play situations in the games you work.Over the years, readers have marveled at the help provided by the alphabetical index. It's 43 pages devoted to every subject, no matter how small, included in the book. Additionally, there's a rule citation index which is invaluable in finding a specific rule. Grab a rulebook, pick a rule, note its citation (7.09a, for example), then check to see if it's explained in the BRD. The index contains 2373 such citations.The author, over the years, has had generous help from rule interpreters and those with authoritative opinions. You find the comments of Mike Fitzpatrick from PBUC, Jim Evans of the Annotated Rules, Rick Roder of the Jaksa/Roder Manual, Kyle McNeeley, chairman of the NFHS rules committee, Joe Paronto, editor of the NCAA book, and many others too numerous to mention here.Here's a sample of a rule change for the 2011 season:48 BATTER: BATTER'S BOX: STEPS: ON PLATE / OUTSIDE BOX: HITS FAIR OR FOUL OR FOUL TIPFED: The batter is out and the ball is dead if he hits fair or foul while (changed - 10) either foot or knee “is touching the ground completely outside the lines of the batter's box or touching home plate.” (7-3-2; 7-3-2 Pen) Last edition: No provision for being out while the knee is on the plate and the pitch is hit.56. ALSO: OFF INTERP 51-48: HOPKINS: If the batter hits a foul tip while touching the plate or outside the lines of the batter's box: The ball is dead and the batter is out. (Website, 2003, #2)NCAA: The batter is out if he hits fair or foul while touching the plate or with one foot on the ground completely outside the lines of the batter's box. (7-10a; 7-10a Pen)57. ALSO: If the batter hits a “foul tip” while not “within the lines of the batter's box,” it is not a foul tip but a foul ball. He is out. (7-8) (See sect. 73.)OBR: If the batter hits fair or foul with one foot on the ground completely outside the batter's box: Same as FED / NCAA. (6.06a) If the batter steps on the plate and hits fair or foul: Point not covered.OFF INTERP 52-48: FITZPATRICK: Unless the batter's foot is completely outside the lines of the box when he steps on the plate, he is not out when he hits the pitched ball fair or foul. (email to cc, 11/15/00) (See sect. 83.)58. ALSO: OFF INTERP 53-48: PBUC MANUAL: The batter is out if he hits a foul tip with one foot completely outside the batter's box. {3.17}Play 46-48: B1 is in the front of the batter's box to hit the curve before it breaks. He takes a mighty swing and foul tips the pitch, which the catcher catches. The umpire notices the batter has one foot on the ground outside the batter's box. Ruling: In FED, the batter is out. [Website interpretation] In NCAA, the batter is out [black-letter law]. In OBR, the batter is out. [PBUC interpretation]The author guarantees you'll get your money's worth!




The 2012 BRD: Baseball Rule Differences


Book Description

The 29th edition of the only book that lists and explains the differences among the major baseball rule books: high school, college, and summer youth games: The National Federation, NCAA / NAIA, and Official Baseball Rules.




The 2014 BRD: Baseball Rule Differences


Book Description

According to Referee Magazine, the BRD is an "essential book" for umpires. If you've ever owned one, you know how valuable it is. If you're a first-time buyer, my guarantee always stands: Get the book. If you don't like it, I'll refund your money and you can keep the book.This year's edition (the 31st) contains 119 official interpretations from Hunter Wendelstedt and the staff of the Wendelstedt Umpire School. In all, the book has 579 "off interps" from recognized authorities in FED, NCAA, and OBR rules. An example: Awards are sometimes made from the time of the pitch, but the OBR doesn't define that. You need the BRD - just to be sure.This edition features 330 plays spread out over 574 sections and is the result of more than 500 hours of painstaking research and editorial revisions.With an alphabetical index and a citation index leading the way, you'll be far ahead of the other umpires in your association when you get this book.Happy reading. And happy research! To paraphrase a well-known pitchman: "You're gonna like the way you call."Carl (Papa C)




Baseball Rule Differences


Book Description




Inside the Books


Book Description

In the Preface, Carl writes: This is my first book solely about the major "departments" of the rules of baseball. The BRD is about rule differences, not about "the rules." In that book I don't have time or space to teach the history, the philosophy, and the tenets of our national pastime's laws and regulations. There has always been a trap, with gleaming, razor-sharp teeth, waiting to come down on the author who has the temerity to publish manuscripts about rules. The reason? What is here today can be gone tomorrow. In 2004, FED decided to allow dead ball appeals. Don't make the ball alive. Don't tag the runner or the base. Just say: "Blue, he missed third." What if you had bought a book on the rules in 2003? Just how beneficial would that book be 2004? How good would it be in 2013. Most people who've heard of me grant that I'm an expert, and I have a website with unlimited space. That means Inside the Books can never become obsolete. If the NCAA changes the DH rule, I'll have an update "in the mail" (on my website) within a day. No charge, not even for shipping. (smile) Those of you who own the BRD will discover that several plays here have their original home in that book. I don't feel bad about using those plays: They have stood the test of time. Here, they help us make sense of the dry, sometimes tedious business of our rules' lexicon. I don't pretend this book covers every important rule. You can see a partial list of omitted rules at "What we left out," p. 161. But I guarantee you'll be a better umpire after working your way through Inside the Books. But I just can't minimize the level of difficulty in this book. My advice: Take lots of notes, discuss your areas of concern with you umpire friends, with me. As the Beatles sang: "We can work it out." Inside the Books covers 13 of the common rules of baseball: appeals, balks, batter interference, batter-runner interference, batting out of order, designated hitter, equipment, force play/slide rule, obstruction, runner interference, substitution, trips to the mound, and warnings. Regards:Carl Childress6/16/2013




The Juju Rules


Book Description

Learn the secret of juju from Seely, a man who wins games for the Yankees by harnessing juju energy, in this hilarious, unforgettable fan confessional from an award-winning humorist.




The Limits of Institutional Reform in Development


Book Description

Developing countries commonly adopt reforms to improve their governments yet they usually fail to produce more functional and effective governments. Andrews argues that reforms often fail to make governments better because they are introduced as signals to gain short-term support. These signals introduce unrealistic best practices that do not fit developing country contexts and are not considered relevant by implementing agents. The result is a set of new forms that do not function. However, there are realistic solutions emerging from institutional reforms in some developing countries. Lessons from these experiences suggest that reform limits, although challenging to adopt, can be overcome by focusing change on problem solving through an incremental process that involves multiple agents.