sweetump wrote:If she drag her foot in one continuous motion, and the arm does not pause,u she is legal. If her arm stops anywhere from 10 o'clock on and her body make a second effort to move forward, she is creating a second push point which in considered a crow hop.
If she is dragging and there is a hole in front of the mound
, she must keep her toes below or even with the plane of the ground.
All associations say the the foot must remain in contact with the ground until the pitch is delivered.
Only in men's fast pitch does it say that they can leap as long as the toe is pointing down.
MTR wrote:sweetump wrote:If she drag her foot in one continuous motion, and the arm does not pause,u she is legal. If her arm stops anywhere from 10 o'clock on and her body make a second effort to move forward, she is creating a second push point which in considered a crow hop.
If she is dragging and there is a hole in front of the mound
, she must keep her toes below or even with the plane of the ground.
All associations say the the foot must remain in contact with the ground until the pitch is delivered.
Only in men's fast pitch does it say that they can leap as long as the toe is pointing down.
Take the bold section out of the equation, has no bearing on the rule or application
Anti-Clone wrote:Why do people insist that the past tense of DRAG is DRUG?
It's DRAG, DRAGS, DRAGGED, DRAGGING.
To say that she "drug her foot" means that she ingested a controlled substance.