Clipping:Tag Home Run

From Protoball
Jump to navigation Jump to search
19C Clippings
Scroll.png


Add a Clipping

a home run over the fence 4

Date 1869
Text

[Atlantic vs. Athletic 10/25/1869] Pike made a clean home run...by a splendid hit over the fence at right field.

Source Philadelphia Sunday Mercury
Tags Home Run
Submitted by Richard Hershberger

Home Run scoring, Baulk rules, Balls and Strikes, and Legal Pitching

Date Saturday, June 16, 1866
Text "1. In making a home run does it count as such if the ball enters the infield before the home base is reached? 2. Does the raising of the pitcher's heel or side of one of his feet constitute a baulk? 3. Is motion of a pitcher attempting to throw to a base and then pitching the ball to the striker a baulk? 5. Does not the refusal of a striker to strike at balls within his legitimate reach, no matter if they are not exactly where he wishes them, if on the side on which heis accostomed to strike, entitle the umpire to call strikes? 6. Has the pitcher in pitching a right to swing his arm out from his side at least a foot and a half? 7. Can a pitcher take one or two steps before he delivers the ball?" .......1. We score a home run when the batsman makes a hit to the outerfield, and runs round from home to home without being obliged to stop on any base to avoid being put out, no matter whether the ball overtakes him at the home base or not. But the run must be made from a ball hit past the outer fields. 2. The pitcher must keep both feet on the ground in making the swing of the arm in delivering the ball. 3. No--but the attempt to deliver and then throw to the base is. 4. Certainly not. The umpire should call "balls" and not "baulks." 5. Yes, as a general thing. But if the striker is in the habit of striking at a low ball, he can require a low one pitched to him. 6. Unless the pitcher keeps a straight arm it is a throw. Custom also requires that his arm swing as near the perpendicular as possible. 7. He can take no steps at all. He must stand with both feet squarely on the ground and within the lines of his position, or he commits a baulk.
Source New York Clipper
Tags Rules, Balk, Balls and Strikes, Home Run, Batting
Submitted by D. Rader