San Diego Padres star Manny Machado is one of the best third basemen in the game. Machado made a high IQ play during Saturday's game against the Cincinnati Reds.
The play occurred in the fifth inning when an easy pop-up from Spencer Steer was purposely allowed to drop by Machado. This allowed the Padres to force an out on second base. Machado did it to avoid Elly De La Cruz's electric speed on the basepaths. Had Machado caught the ball, De La Cruz would have remained safe at first while Steer would have retired.
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But one question that is coming to everyone's mind is why the umpires didn't invoke the infield fly rule.
What is the infield fly rule?
The infield fly rule is designed to prevent infielders from deceiving baserunners by intentionally dropping an easy fly ball to turn a double play. The rule automatically calls the batter out when:
- There are runners on first and second, or bases loaded,
- There are fewer than two outs, and
- The ball is a routine popup that can be caught by an infielder with ordinary effort.
Why the infield fly rule didn’t apply here?
Coming back to the play by Machado, the reason why the umpires didn't invoke the infield fly rule was because a double play wasn't possible since there wasn’t a runner on second.
That eliminates one of the key criteria for invoking the infield fly rule, i.e., runners must be on first and second (or bases loaded). Since that condition wasn’t met, Machado was within the rules to let the ball drop to tag De La Cruz.
Padres still ended up allowing a run
While the Padres were able to remove the electric speed of Elly De La Cruz from the basepaths, Spencer Steer scored a run for the Reds. On a sac-fly from Tyler Stephenson, Steer came around to score as the Reds took a 4-1 lead after that fifth inning.
However, the Padres staged a comeback by scoring multiple runs in the sixth and seventh innings. The three-run seventh inning proved to be enough as Manny Machado's team won 6-4.
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Edited by Chaitanya Prakash