 If you just watched the first video, then welcome back. And if not, then what we're looking at here is a few of the less common ways that a runner can be called out while he is out on the base paths. And this is certainly not all of them, but just a few of the more less common ones that we're looking at in this video for these two videos. So last time I looked at four this time, we're going to look at three. And the first two of these involve failing to touch a base or oversliding a base and failing to go back. So the first one is that a runner is out when he fails to return to first base after sliding or oversliding or overrunning that base. So the runner is out when he fails to return or as the rules say, he fails to return at once to first base after overrunning or oversliding that base. And so then after that, I kind of breaks it off into two parts. It says that if he does that and then the runner attempts to go to second base, then it's just kind of like a normal play. And so what the defense has to do is get the ball and tag him out. But so let's write that. If the runner attempts to go to second base, he must be tagged where if the runner kind of abandoned for whatever reason, maybe he thinks that there was a close play at first base and he thinks he was out and he tries to go back to the dugout, then in that situation, it would be an appeal play. So if he goes to the rulebook, covers a couple of different possibilities as to his position or the dugout, he can be tagged or called out on an appeal. And so perhaps this is something that should have been covered in really early videos. And that basically says that whenever I'm sure it's something you'll see pretty much in every single game. And that is if there's a batter up the bat and he hits a single, especially if it stays in the infield, that batter is going to run to first base and he's not just going to stop on the base. He's actually going to continue and run through it. And a lot of times they'll kind of peel out this way. And that's to avoid any confusion that he's attempting to make at the second base. But so he's not out or he can't be tagged out when he's off the base as long as he comes right back to the base and stands on there. And that's really what this rule is referring to, is that he can run through the base. But as soon as he either turns towards second base or he tries to leave the field, then he's kind of fair game to be tagged out. The next way we can look at, we're running out of colors here, is that the runner is out when in running or sliding into home base or home plate, he fails to touch home plate and makes no attempt to return to it. So he fails to touch home plate or sliding and he makes no attempt to return to the base. And so this would be done on an appeal play where a player then would get the ball and he would step on home plate and then the umpire who should be watching. And a lot of times, if you watch games closely, a home plate umpire, even if there isn't a play on home plate, he will actually make the safe signal whenever a runner comes across and steps on the base just for this reason. The final way is probably a situation that you'll never see and it's kind of a silly situation and that is that after a runner has acquired possession of a base, he runs the bases in reverse order for either to confuse the defense or the rule book uses the phrase to make a travesty of the game. So the runner is out when he runs or really it starts out that after he has legally acquired base, he runs the bases in reverse order to confuse the defense or make a travesty of the game. And so whenever this happens, the rule book tells the umpire that he should immediately call timeout and then call the runner out. So that's not an appeal play at all. That's just the whenever that happens, the umpire should stop playing and call them out right away. And so the reason that's in there is because at one point that wasn't a rule. And so maybe we'll look at why somebody would have done that. It seems like a silly thing, but there's a few rare situations where somebody might have done it for whatever reason. So that is why that rule exists. But so there are seven more ways. I think now we have covered every different way that a batter and a fielder can be covered out throughout the whole history of these videos.