sombb wrote:Was a gb(ss)x, last I knew the rules it meant runner on 3rd hold, other runners advance 1 base.
Here is a link to a photo image of the X chart:
http://smg.photobucket.com/user/bernieh ... s.jpg.htmlI think that the rule you are quoting was in effect before strat came out with the super advanced fielding chart (at the link above). The results that can occur now with the infield in and the fielding chart are quite varied.
I was surprised even right now to see that with a G2 (equivalent of a groundball B) on the fielding chart, with the infield in, with runners on 3rd (or 2nd and 3rd, but NOT forced), the lead runner is actually out and the batter is safe! I guess the theory with that is that on a sharply hit groundball, the offense would be sending the runner.
Other interesting results:
-on a G3 (equivalent to groundball C), and a runner only on third (or 2nd and third), infield in, the offensive manager gets a "decide" result, where he can still try to send the runner, with odds to compute for his chances of success based on the baserunner's ability and the fielder's range rating. But, on a G3 with runners at 1st and 3rd, the runner on 3rd gets caught in a rundown, batter is safe, and runner on first advances.
-You can still get a double play, with the infield in, on a G1 (GBA equivalent) with the bases loaded - a home to first double play.
The older default rule that you remember is still there, described as "Batter", in the context of various configurations of base runners for G1 and G2 results, but not for a G3.
Remember the dreaded "#" results become Single** (runners advance 2 bases), and the fielder's range rating increases by 1!
I haven't found a link to the rules yet for batter card results (GBA, B or C).