BaseBall Questions and Answers
How is my role-play troop? please confer some feedback and ratings.?
Question:http://i10.tinypic.com/2ltiqa8.jpg...
go in that and click once to zoom in to see my troop.
tell me what you meditate
i give myself 6/10 hitting and 8.5/10 for pitching
Answers:
Very devout team depending on how heaps teams are contained by your league. Make sure to get JJ Putz and Octavio Dotel contained by when your starters aren't starting. I'd give you a 9/10 for both pitching and hitting.
i offer you a 9 for hitting
10 for pitching
it good but not at your best trade bonds for some1 better
I'd say 7/10 for hitting and 7.5/10 for pitching--not particularly good.
Did you hear nearly the autographed baseball signed for hecklers?
Question:Check out the link near a picture of the ball
http://www.homerderby.com/
Answers:
I love it, I hear that story on the radio the other day and died laughing, perfect for Vernon Wells, very funny and imaginative.
...? wtf
Wow that is pretty cool, at smallest he had a sence of humor.
lol...i love that!!
Ha Ha ...Ultimately the kid will be on the Heckler because the pen uses disappearing ink and inside is a small explosive device in valise the heckler wants to put the orb on E-Bay.
Baseball scenario interrogate?
Question:Runners on 1st and 2nd. The pitcher throws to first to try and pick off the runner but throws profusely into the stands. How far do the runners advance?
Answers:
Simple play -- if the pitcher steps stale the rubber with his pivot foot (same foot as his glove is on) in the past step it is a two base award as he is very soon considered an infielder for throwing purposes.
If he simply steps or "Jump turns" to first then it is a one substructure award as he is still considered in contact next to the rubber. (Same concept as with a gibbering pitch that goes out of play.)
The runners can mortgage as many basis as they can as long as the ball is surrounded by play. If the ball lands contained by the stands or dugout or somewhere that is consider out of play the runners will achieve only one stub.
Both runners advance two basis when a ball is thrown out of play. The runner at second podium advances to home; the runner at first groundwork advances to third plinth. Had the ball remained within play (retrievable by a fielder), both runners could have advanced at their own risk.
one bottom
1 base. that's the rule from little league to the majors.
Joe M have it right, two bases. Runners are awarded two basis for a ball that go out of play.
Two bases.
MLB Rule 7.05:
Each runner including the batter-runner may, lacking liability to be put out, advance --
(g) Two basis when, with no spectators on the playing paddock, a thrown ball go into the stands, or into a bench (whether or not the ball rebound into the field), or over or under or through a pasture fence, or on a slanting part of the pack of the screen above the backstop, or remains surrounded by the meshes of a wire eyeshade protecting spectators. The ball is unresponsive. When such wild throw is the first play by an infielder, the umpire, within awarding such bases, shall be govern by the position of the runners at the time the ball be pitched; in adjectives other cases the umpire shall be governed by the position of the runners at the time the raging throw was made;
If the pitcher be still on the rubber when he threw to first, the runners would be awarded one base: the runner on second would finance to third and the runner on first would advance to second.
If the pitcher have stepped off up to that time throwing, the runners would be awarded two bases: the runner on second would be awarded home and the runner on first would be awarded third.
The runners can finance as many basis as they can as long as the ball is contained by play. If the ball lands within the stands or dugout or somewhere that is consider out of play the runners will acquire only one bed.
Very simple.One base.
If the orb goes out of play (i.e., into the dugout or the stands) they can one and only advance one underside if his foot was on the rubber. Otherwise, two basis.
What are some of your favorite baseball announcer cliches?
Question:I always like the obligatory statement in connection with "helping his own cause" whenever a pitcher gets a hit.
There's also the "that globe has to be caught," after an outfielder error.
And whenver a troop goes up by more than one run within the 7th, 8th, or 9th innings, you are guaranteed to hear something about "insurance runs."
Answers:
Ernie Harwell's call third strikeouts: "He stood there similar to the house by the side of the road, and watched it shift by" or my favorite: "He's called out for excessive windowshopping."
Back...track...wall.. gone!
You can inform its bye bye baby.
i approaching when they call a fitting defensive play nifty, that word is so funny
I other hear (mostly from when Alfonso Soriano played second base and lately with A-Rod): "You gotta put away the gimmies"
(Heard this one lately yesterday when Contreras got lit up):
"He's throwing bat practice out there!"
YOU CAN PUT IT ON THE BOARD..
YYYEEEEEESSSSSSSS(White Sox)
He plays the winter sport the way it’s supposed to be played. Every time I hear this I infer of Don Mattinglty.
That was a nice piece of hitting.
That's a Can of Corn!
"ground globe to foulke, flips it to first, Red Sox fans own longed to hear it, THE BOSTON RED SOX ARE WORLD CHAMPIONS..." only piece I like give or take a few hearing Joe Buck's voice...
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