 We had a long, long at bat in this Arkansas versus Texas game. Hannah Gamble, third baseman, bats fifth, 377 batting average, 515 on base percentage, 18 homers. She can hit. There's two outs. There's runners on first and third, and she is trying to add to her team's lead. This is 20 pitches long. First pitch, catcher likes it, let's go. It's a little screwball up and in, 61. Not nice, good, good take, good take, good take, Hannah. 1-0, next pitch, that's called strike. So one and one, and she's just throwing this same pitch. I think it's a little screwball, that's what the broadcasters are saying. Inside, it's around 60, 61 miles per hour, and she's way ahead of it. She moved up in the box to get ready for it, and she's just ahead of it, ahead of it, ahead of it, ready to hit, ready to go, I'm not even ready. She's like, oh, my bad, okay, I'll wait for you. I just would really like to hit. That's up and in, and fouled back. We're at pitch number seven now, same exact thing as pitch number six, fouled back. Pitch number eight, pretty much the same exact thing. Straightens this one out a little bit, goes for a run, just in case, gets back to the box, head back in it. Okay, gonna need to wait on this pitch a little bit more. Pitch number nine on its way, and off-speed pitch. So that was the first one that was a little changeup, 53 miles per hour, and she is like even more sped up on it, which is odd, just got the head there, maybe recognized it and then tried to put it in play. Anyway, nine pitch at bat, long at bat. At this point, it gets even longer, goes back to that screwball in foul. Next pitch, same exact thing. That guy checked his watch, like, okay, how long am I gonna be here? This at bat is taking a full inning, but the other fans, they're getting on their feet. They're like, damn, this is a battle. We are at 11 pitches, going on 12, and that is a ball. Wanted that one for strike three. It's ball three, pitch number 13, fouled down the left field line into the net. Okay, focus, focus, focus. Now that guy's checking his phone, he's got somewhere to be. The three two, swung on ripped foul. I mean, a little more straight, and she's like, okay, getting there, getting there. They're clapping, they're filming, they're cheering, pitch number 15 on its way. What are they gonna go with? Oh, got her? No, so here's where it gets confusing. They rule that a foul ball, but Texas says no, it hit her, she swung and it hit her. Now she knows that she didn't even actually hit it. So they're gonna get together and say we're gonna go replay this because Texas is saying that hit her after, even though she swung at it, it hit her, it didn't hit the bat. And they're right, it definitely didn't hit the bat. By that time, the bat is way ahead of the ball. I know we don't have an angle here, but like the physics wouldn't make sense that it would make contact there. If you saw the side view, the ball's by her shoulder and the bat's way ahead of her. And it hits her shoulder, they're saying, not her bat, but she swung, so it'd be a strike three. But the umpires, they're gonna get together and this is like really weird, I don't really understand what happened here, but according to the broadcasters, the umpires get together, they review this, they don't have many angles of it, and they say, sorry, that's actually not a reviewable play. We can't review hit by pitches. Which, okay, but review if she fouled it or not. So video review, this is what they put on the screen that you're allowed to review, batted balls, fair fouls. So that's like very much what we're trying to look at here. But the way they phrased it was we think that hit her, which then would mean you're trying to review a hit by pitch, which is not reviewable, which makes no sense at all. Like, why would that not be reviewable? And why wouldn't you just say, okay, review that it didn't hit the bat? I don't really understand, but the at bat continues and Hannah's lucky and she fouls that one back. And now we're onto pitch number 17, gonna be coming her way, that one fouled down the line. So we're just doing the same thing, pitch number 18, same thing, same thing. I throw a screwball, you hit it down the third base line, pitch number 19, same thing. And now they're like, let's really get up. Come on, let's really get up and go outside with it. She waits on it and the second baseman makes a great place. I got you, I got you. And the pitcher, let's go. Yeah, yeah, let's go. Excited about it and she's gonna give out. That was a lot of pitches. And the good thing is, look at this play, little backpick right to the bag to get the force. I got you, I got you. In baseball, this would be damning, but in softball, their arms can go forever. They can pitch two games in one day. Pitch count doesn't really matter. In baseball, you'd kill a whole pitcher's outing. So look at the difference between the pitch right before this, which is the one that she's been fouling off. According to miles per hour, it's the same speed, but instead of coming inside, she goes outside and I think Hannah purposely did wait or she wasn't gonna swing at it because she thought it was outside and then thought, oh shit, maybe I should swing at that and puts weak contact on there. And I really like the catcher for Texas, who does this, every single pitch. Nice, cage all day, each of the hitters. No homer, the at-bat.