Unless there have been no previous outs have been recorded, then no.
A fly ball that advances a runner from second to third is not counted as a sacrifice fly, and it does count as an at bat. Unless a runner scores on a fly ball, the batter is charged with an at bat.
Yes as long as the runner advances Assuming you mean the runner tags up on a fly ball and advances to second, it is not scored as a sacrifice, but, simply as a fly out and the batter is charged with a time at bat. If the batter bunt a ground ball, the runner would not be required to "tag up" to advance and the batter would be credited with a sacrifice. If the batter is attempting a sacrifice bunt and pops up and the runner, tags up and somehow advances to second the batter is not credited with a sacrifice.
inning over, interference on batter is irrelevant
NO. Base runner's must run the bases in the order they batted. If a runner overtakes another runner, he is automatically out.
Yes it is considered a sacrifice.
I think this question is referring to hitting behind a baserunner to advance them? With a runner on second base if a hitter can hit the ball on the ground to the right side of the infield the runner on second base should be able to advance to third because the obvious play is to first for the out. Like a sacrifice, but not entirely, because there is a chance for a basehit.
Second place,after first,second bestsecond rateloser
yaa
no
In the game of baseball, a sacrifice hit is another name for a sacrifice bunt, a ball which has been intentionally hit softly with the intention of advancing a runner on-base at the cost of an out.
The runner only has to run if there is another runner behind him (bases loaded) or if there is a force at secoind base.
It's a sacrifice fly. The batter is credited with an RBI, and the at-bat does not count against his batting average. The runner on second is inconsequential to the scoring decision.