Baseball: Empoisonnée Also Appear To Be Related. Consensus
Baseball: Empoisonnée Also Appear To Be Related. Consensus
Baseball: Empoisonnée Also Appear To Be Related. Consensus
History
A game from the Cantigas de Santa Maria, c. 1280,
involving tossing a ball, hitting it with a stick and
competing with others to catch it.
Baseball Bat
You can't really play baseball without a bat! While there is a
ton of fun to be had by just getting your glove on and playing catch
with a friend, the game itself involves hitting and that means a bat.
There are many different kinds of bats and, like gloves,
there are models for youth and adult. Youth bats have smaller
barrels and are a lot lighter. Adult bats are heavier and have
bigger barrels. It's easier to hit the ball more solidly with a bigger
barrel, so my advice is to get a bat that's as big as you can handle.
By handle I mean hold and swing comfortably, and it doesn't feel
like a log in your hands.
There are aluminum and other types of metal bats and
there are wood bats. Most leagues lower than professional
baseball use metal bats. There are some nice advantages to
metal; they hit the ball a little better and they don't break!
Wood bats are beautiful and can be made from a wide
variety of wood. My favorite part of wood bats is the way it sounds
when you hit a ball really hard, there's nothing like it!
Bats range in price from $20-$200 for youth models and can go up to $400 for
adult models, and there are plethora of choices out there for your new bat.
Baseballs
I almost forgot that you'll need balls in order to play! Most baseballs
are made of a rubberized core, wrapped with yarn (very densely), and
covered with full grain leather. There are differences to this with some
balls, and some balls are covered with plastic to make them better for
use in wet weather.
Baseballs are very hard, and weigh 5.25 ounces. They're perfectly
round and designed to throw. If you don't believe me pick one up, I promise you'll feel
like throwing it right away!
Batting Helmet
If you're going to be playing in a game, or stepping in to try to hit live pitching,
you'll need a helmet. Helmets are made of strong plastic material and have padding on
the inside for safety and comfort.
There are lots of different colors and models to choose from, and they range in
price from $15-$70. Helmets are rated by the miles per hour of the baseball they are
designed to protect you from.
Catchers Gear
If you want to be a catcher, you'll need protective gear.
Catcher's gear consists of leg guards, chest pad, and a
helmet. The gear comes in all the different sizes that you'll
need and is made by many different companies. You can get
a cheap set of gear for under $100, or suit yourself up in the
finest around for about $400.
Catchers get hit by plenty of baseballs over the course
of a baseball game. Hitters foul balls off, pitchers throw them
in the dirt which in turn bounce into the catcher, and all of
them hurt! Without catchers’ gear, don't even think about
getting back there to catch pitches behind a hitter.
FIELD EQUIPMENTS
Bases
The three bases and home plate make up a diamond, with 90
feet between each of the bases. From Home to Second Base is
127' 3 3/8". The distance between the pitcher's rubber and
home plate in baseball is 60 feet, 6 inches. The home plate is
17 inches wide.
Pitcher Mound
The Pitchers Mound is 60' 6" in front of the home plate, in the
line between home plate and second base.
Outfield
The original rules of baseball did not specify the minimum size of the outfield.
Consequently, there are outfields of very differing sizes. Most professional ball parks in
the USA were built to the confines that the city offered them. For example here are
some field sizes:
o Boston's Fenway: 310 feet in Left - 420 feet in Center - 302 feet in Right
o Detroit's Comerica Park: 345 feet in Left - 420 feet in Center - 330 feet in Right
o Chicago's Wrigley Field: 355 feet in Left - 400 feet in Center - 353 feet in Right
o Houston's Minute Maid Park: 315 feet in Left - 435 feet in Center - 326 feet in
Right
TECHNICAL SKILLS
Throwing - is an essential skill in baseball that requires coordination of the whole body.
Each throw needs to be quick and accurate in order to hinder the opposing team
from scoring.
Hitting - the main goal of the players who hold the bat is to hit the ball and drive it away,
far away from the fielders. By hitting the baseball hard enough, the fielders will be
running after the baseball giving the hitter ample time to run from the plate to the first
base.
Fielding - when the opposing team is batting, the fielders support the pitcher in the field.
The fielder is any defensive player whose goal is to protect his base and secure the
flying baseball in his hands and hold it as firmly as possible.
Catching - the catcher has the most physically and mentally draining task among the
players of baseball. Making split-second-game-changing decisions, the catcher is
considered the coach on the field.
Base Running - one of the vital skills that are often overlooked in a power game like
baseball is base running. Mobility and speed are the crafts that need to be honed for
runners not just in baseball but also in other sports.
Eye – Hand Coordination - coordination is a crucial skill a baseball player needs. During
a game on the field, a batter needs to quickly process visual information in order for
him to measure how he will hit the ball and the amount of force he needs to exert.
TACTICAL SKILLS
Tactical skills can best be defined as “the decisions and actions of players in the
contest to gain an advantage over the opposing team or players”. One way that
coaches can approach teaching tactical skills is by focusing on three critical aspects,
the “tactical triangle”:
Anyone who has observed baseball for any length of time has seen players make
errors in games on plays that they have practiced many times in training sessions. Such
situations can cause tremendous frustration, for both players and coaches. As you will
see, however, these errors can be prevented!
Game Limits
At the professional and collegiate levels, there is no time limit for games. Games
are over when nine innings are completed, whether it takes two hours or 10. In high
school and youth leagues, time limits may be installed by the leagues that have
jurisdiction. Having a "time limit" means that a new inning may not start after the time
has expired.
Inning Structure
The batting team tries to score as many runs as it can before the team in the field
can record three outs in a given inning. When three outs are recorded, a team's time at
bat for that inning ends. There are numerous ways to record an out. The batter can hit
the ball and have it caught before it hits the ground (called a fly out). The batter can also
hit the ball on the ground, and if the fielder throws the ball to a player touching the base
before a runner forced to try to advance gets there, the runner is out (called a ground
out). Tagging a player from the batting team with the ball while that player is not on a
base is another way to record an out. A strikeout is also a way to record an out. Getting
outs is the main goal of the pitcher and the team in the field. When the fielding team
records three outs, the inning ends. The team that was hitting then goes in the field, and
the team that was in the field takes its turn at bat.
Scoring Runs
When a runner gets on base, usually by hitting the ball and reaching base safely
or earning a walk, it is the next hitter in the lineup's job to "drive him in." A run is scored
when a runner crosses home plate safely; either being driven in by a hit, an error, a
fielder's choice, or a walk with the bases loaded. A batter can score a run by himself by
hitting a home run, usually accomplished by hitting a ball over the outfield fence. If a
home run is hit, the batter and everybody on base scores. The team that scores more
runs over the course of nine innings wins the game.
Stealing Bases
Once a runner is on base, he may attempt to steal the next base in professional
baseball and many higher levels of the game. A runner does this by making a dash for
the next base once the pitcher pitches the ball. After the pitcher releases the ball, it's the
catcher's job to receive the ball and throw it to the base the runner is trying to steal. If a
fielder receives the throw and tags the runner before he reaches the base, the runner is
out. A pitcher can try to counter a stolen base by attempting to "pick off" the runner
instead of pitching. Picking off consists of making a throw to the base the runner
occupies before he steals, hoping to catch the runner off the base. If the pitcher makes
any move to deceive the base runner, a balk is called, and the runner is awarded the
next base.
The Umpires
Normally Umpires work in a crew of four, taking it in turns to occupy the role of
"Home Plate Umpire" for that day's game. The home plate umpire is the most important
official in any game. He stands just behind the catcher, and decides whether a pitch is a
strike or a ball.
It is generally acknowledged that whilst the umpires are all supposed to call the
same strike zone, each umpire actually has his own "individual strike zone". The home
plate umpire will normally call a "strike" by throwing his arm out in a sharp manner, or
clenching his fist in an upward motion, whilst a "ball" is called without any signal (if he
doesn't make a signal, it's a ball). His call of a third strike will usually be very
exaggerated.
The first and third base umpires are also responsible for calling whether balls hit
along their lines are "foul" or "fair", though in the playoffs two other umpires are added
to stand in the outfield along the first and third base lines to make outfield calls.
Finally, the first or third base umpire may be called on by the home plate umpire
to advise whether a batter "went around on a check swing". If a hitter starts swinging at
a pitch, and then realizes it's going to be a ball, and checks his swing, then it's only a
strike if he swings his bat in front of him. If he manages to stop the bat before it gets in
front, the swing doesn't count.
The umpires will (usually) work as a team, and if any umpire has any doubt about
a call they'll congregate to discuss the call and make sure they get it right.