In
baseball, a
home run
(abbreviated
HR) is scored when the ball is hit in
such a way that the
batter is
able to circle all the bases, ending at home plate and scoring
runs for himself and each
runner who was already on base, with no
errors by the defensive team on the play.
In modern baseball, the feat is typically achieved by hitting the
ball over the
outfield fence between the
foul poles (or making contact with either foul pole) without first
touching the ground, resulting in an automatic home run. There is
also the "
inside-the-park"
home run, increasingly rare in modern baseball, where the hitter
circles the bases while the baseball is in play on the field.
When a home run is scored, the batter is also credited with a
hit and a run scored, and an
RBI for each runner that scores, including himself.
Likewise, the pitcher is recorded as having given up a hit, a run
for each runner that scores including the batter, and an
earned run each for the batter and for all
baserunners who did not initially reach base on
error, except for the runs scored by any
runners who reached base while facing an earlier pitcher are
charged to that pitcher.
Home runs are among the most popular aspects of baseball and, as a
result, prolific home run hitters are usually the most popular
among fans and consequently the highest paid by teams, hence the
old saying, variously attributed to slugger
Ralph Kiner, or to a teammate talking about
Kiner, "Home run hitters drive
Cadillacs,
and singles hitters drive
Ford."
Types of home runs
Outside the park
The most common type of home run involves hitting the ball over the
outfield fence, or above a line on the outfield fence specifically
designed to indicate a home run,
in
flight, in
fair territory, i.e., out
of the playing field, without it being caught or deflected back by
an outfielder into the playing field. This is sometimes called a
home run "out of the ballpark", although that term is frequently
used to indicate a blow that completely clears any outfield
seating, as a home run is usually automatically assumed to have
left the field of play unless otherwise indicated.
A batted ball is also considered a home run if the ball touches any
of the following while
in flight,
regardless of whether the ball subsequently rebounds back onto the
playing field:
- Foul pole or attached screen
- Glove, hat, or any equipment or apparel deliberately
thrown by a fielder. or any part of the fielder's glove when the
fielder leaps to unsuccessfully catch a fly ball that lands beyond
or on top of the fence, in an attempt to stop or deflect a fair
ball that, in the umpires' judgment, would have otherwise been a
home run. On rare occasions the momentum of the ball has been known
to take the glove off a fielder's hand as opposed to the fielder
throwing the glove.
- Any fixed object where a particular ballpark's ground rules specifically state that
a batted ball striking that object is a home run. This usually
applies to objects such as ladders, scoreboard supports, etc. which
are beyond the outfield fence in fair territory, but are located
such that it is difficult for an umpire to quickly judge their
position in relation to the field from several hundred feet
away.

If the ball hits the foul pole, and
bounces toward the inside of the foul line, it is a home run.
If it bounces outside, it is a foul ball.
A home run accomplished in any of the above manners is an automatic
home run. The ball is considered dead, and the batter and any
preceding runners cannot be put out at any time while running the
bases. However, if one or more runners fail to touch a base or one
runner passes another before reaching home plate, that runner or
runners can be called out on
appeal,
though in the case of not touching a base a runner can go back and
touch it if doing so won't cause them to be passed by another
preceding runner and they have not yet touched the next base (or
home plate in the case of missing third base).
An automatic home run counts for the same number of runs whether it
cleared the fence by 250 or 500 feet, but the more impressive a
home run's distance is, the more superlatives and colorful
adjectives are likely to be applied to it by the media: "tattooed",
"hammered", "drilled", "towering", "tape measure", "in orbit",
etc.
Inside-the-park home run
An
inside-the-park home run
occurs when a batter hits the ball into play and is able to circle
the bases before the fielders can put him out. Unlike with an
outside-the-park home run, the batter-runner and all preceding
runners are liable to be put out by the defensive team at any time
while running the bases.
In the early days of baseball, outfields were relatively much more
spacious, reducing the likelihood of an over-the-fence home run,
while increasing the likelihood of an inside-the-park home run, as
a ball getting past an outfielder had more distance that it could
roll before a fielder could track it down.
With outfields much less spacious and more uniformly designed than
in the game's early days, inside-the-park home runs are now a
rarity. They are usually the result of a ball being hit by a very
fast runner, coupled with an outfielder either misjudging the
flight of the ball (e.g., diving and missing) or the ball taking an
unexpected bounce, either way sending the ball into open space in
the outfield and thereby allowing the batter-runner to circle the
bases before the defensive team can put him out. The speed of the
runner is crucial as even triples are relatively rare in most
modern ballparks.
If any defensive play on an inside-the-park home run is labeled an
error by the official scorer, a
home run is not scored; instead, it is scored as a
single,
double, etc., and the
batter-runner and any applicable preceding
runners are said to have taken all additional bases on error. All
runs scored on such a play, however, still count.
An example of an unexpected bounce occurred during the
2007 Major League
Baseball All-Star Game on July 10, 2007.
Ichiro Suzuki of the
American League team hit a fly ball off the
right-center field wall, which caromed in the opposite direction
from where
National League right
fielder
Ken Griffey, Jr. was
expecting it to go. By the time the ball was relayed, Ichiro had
already crossed the plate standing up. This was the first
inside-the-park home run in
All-Star Game history,
and led to Ichiro being named the game's
MVP, or most valuable player.
Specific situation home runs
These types of home runs are characterized by the specific game
situation in which they occur, and can theoretically occur on
either an outside-the-park or inside-the-park home run.
Grand slam
Home runs are often characterized by the number of runners on base
at the time, if any. A home run hit with the bases empty is seldom
called a "one-run homer", but rather a "solo" homer. With one or
two runners on base, the home runs are usually called "two-run
homers" or "three-run homers". The term "four-run homer" is seldom
used. Instead, it is nearly always called a "grand slam".
A grand slam occurs when the bases are "loaded" (that is, there are
base runners standing at first, second, and third base) and the
batter hits a home run. According to
The Dickson Baseball
Dictionary, the term originated in the card game of
contract bridge. An
inside-the-park
grand slam is a grand slam without the ball leaving the
field, and it is very rare, due to the relative rarity of loading
the bases along with the significant rarity (nowadays) of
inside-the-park home runs.
On July
25, 1956 Roberto Clemente became
the only MLB player to have ever scored a walk-off
inside-the-park grand slam in a 9-8 Pittsburgh Pirates win over the Chicago Cubs, at Forbes Field
.
Walk-off home run
A walk-off home run is a home run hit by the
home team in the bottom of the ninth inning, any
extra inning, or other scheduled final
inning, which gives the home team the lead and thereby ends the
game. A home run by the visiting team can become a walk-off homer
if the game is suspended for any reason and later is ruled a
complete game, although this would be extremely rare because when
the visiting team take the lead in the top of any inning, the home
team is expected to bat in the bottom of the same inning if at all
possible, even after lengthy weather delays.
The term is attributed
to Hall of Fame
relief pitcher
Dennis Eckersley, so named because
after the run is scored, the players can "walk off" the
field. The name initially meant that the pitcher walked off
the field with his head hung in shame, but changed over time to
mean that the batter, by necessity of the home team, would walk off
the field to the cheers of the crowd. An ultimate grand slam is a
specific type of walk-off home run (see
grand slam above).
This type of home run is also called "sayonara home run,"
"sayonara" meaning "good-bye" in
Japanese.
Two
World Series have ended via the
"walk-off" home run. The first was the
1960 World Series when
Bill Mazeroski of the
Pittsburgh Pirates hit a 9th inning solo
home run in the 7th game of the series off
New York Yankees pitcher
Ralph Terry to give the Pirates the World
Championship. The second time was the
1993 World Series when
Joe Carter of the
Toronto Blue Jays hit a 9th inning 3-run
home run off
Philadelphia
Phillies pitcher
Mitch Williams
in Game 6 of the series.
Such a home run can also be called a "
sudden death" or "sudden victory" home
run. That usage has lessened as "walk-off home run" has gained
favor. Along with Mazeroski's 1960 shot, the most famous walk-off
or sudden-death homer would probably be the "
Shot Heard 'Round the
World" hit by
Bobby Thomson to win
the 1951 National League pennant for the
New York Giants.
A sudden-victory home run over the fence is the exception to
baseball's one run rule. Normally if the home team is tied or
behind in the ninth or extra innings the game ends if the home team
(achieves a tie and) scores one more run. For example if the
San Diego Padres are trailing the
Houston Astros in the bottom of the
ninth in San Diego by a score of 5-3 and the Padres have the bases
loaded, and their batter hits a
grand slam, regardless of the number
of outs the Padres would score 4 runs to win the game by the final
score of 7-5, where any lesser hit would depend on the speed of the
base runners to determine if the runner could score from first for
a 6-5 win. This only applies if the ball is hit over the fence. If
the ball is hit inside the park, the game ends as soon as the
winning run cross the plate, so the batter can only be credited
with a single, double or triple at most.
Back-to-back
The term "back-to-back" is a colloquialism for "consecutive",
specifically referring to two like events occurring consecutively.
One example "back-to-back" in general is winning two consecutive
championships.
In baseball, back-to-back can refer to two consecutive players
hitting a home run, or it could refer to an individual hitting home
runs in two consecutive at bats. The former usage is probably more
common.
When two consecutive batters each hit a home run, this is described
as back-to-back home runs. It is still considered back-to-back even
if both batters hit their home runs off of different pitchers. A
third batter hitting a home run is commonly referred to as
back-to-back-to-back. Four home runs in a row by consecutive
batters has only occurred six times in the history of Major League
Baseball. Following convention, this is called
back-to-back-to-back-to-back.
The most recent occurrence was on August 14,
2008, when the Chicago White Sox
hit four in a row against the Kansas
City Royals in U.S.
Cellular Field
as Jim Thome, Paul Konerko, Alexei
Ramirez and Juan Uribe homered off
pitchers Joel Peralta (the first three)
and Robinson Tejada.Two
pitchers have surrendered back-to-back-to-back-to-back home runs;
Paul Foytack on July 31, 1963, and
Chase Wright on April 22, 2007.
Come-from-behind back-to-back-to-back-to-back home runs occurred on
April 22, 2007 and September 18, 2006. On April 22, 2007 the
Boston Red Sox were trailing the
New York Yankees 3-0 when
Manny Ramirez,
J.
D. Drew,
Mike Lowell and
Jason Varitek hit back-to-back-to-back-to-back
home runs to put them up 4-3. They eventually went on to win the
game 7-6 after a three-run home run by Mike Lowell in the bottom of
the 7th inning. On September 18, 2006 trailing 9-5 to the San Diego
Padres in the 9th inning,
Jeff Kent, J. D.
Drew,
Russell Martin, and
Marlon Anderson of the Los Angeles Dodgers
hit back-to-back-to-back-to-back home runs to tie the game. The
Dodgers won the game in the 10th, off a walk-off home run by
Nomar Garciaparra.
J. D. Drew has been part of two different sets of
back-to-back-to-back-to-back home runs. In both occurrences, his
homer was the second of the four.
On September 30, 1997, in the sixth inning of Game One of the
American League Division
Series between the
New York
Yankees and
Cleveland Indians,
Tim Raines,
Derek
Jeter and
Paul O'Neill
hit back-to-back-to-back home runs for the Yankees. Raines' home
run tied the game. New York went on to win 8-6. This was the first
occurrence of three home runs in a row ever in postseason play. The
Boston Red Sox repeated the feat in
Game Four of the
2007 American League
Championship Series, also against the Indians.
Simple back-to-back home runs are a relatively frequent occurrence.
If a pitcher gives up a homer, he might have his concentration
broken, and might alter his normal approach in an attempt to "make
up for it" by striking out the next batter with some fastballs.
Sometimes the next batter will be expecting that, and will
capitalize on it. A notable back-to-back home run of that type in
World Series play involved "
Babe Ruth's called shot" in 1932,
which was accompanied by various Ruthian theatrics, yet the
pitcher,
Charlie Root, was allowed to
stay in the game. He delivered just one more pitch, which
Lou Gehrig drilled out of the park for a
back-to-back shot, after which Root was removed from the
game.
In Game 3 of the
1976 NLCS,
George Foster and
Johnny Bench hit back-to-back homers in the
last of the ninth off
Ron Reed to tie the
game. The Series-winning run was scored later in the inning.
Another notable pair of back-to-back home runs occurred on
September 14, 1990, when
Ken Griffey, Sr. and
Ken Griffey, Jr. hit back-to-back home
runs, off
Kirk McCaskill, the only
father-and-son duo to do so in Major League history.
Likewise, individuals hitting home runs in consecutive at-bats is
not unusual, but three or more is rare. The record for consecutive
home runs by a batter under any circumstances is 4.
Of the fifteen players (through 2006) who have hit 4 in one game,
six have hit them consecutively. 28 other batters have hit four
consecutive across two games.
Bases on balls do not count as at-bats, and
Ted Williams holds the record for consecutive
home runs across the most games, 4 in four games played, during
September 17-22, 1957, for the Red Sox. Williams hit a pinch-hit
homer on the 17th; walked as a pinch-hitter on the 18th; there was
no game on the 19th; hit another pinch-homer on the 20th; homered
and then was lifted for a pinch-runner after at least one walk, on
the 21st; and homered after at least one walk on the 22nd. All in
all, he had 4 walks interspersed among his 4 homers.
In
World Series play,
Reggie Jackson was the most recent to hit a
record three in one Series game, the final game in 1977. Those were
consecutive in his first three at bats. He had also hit one in his
last at bat the previous game, so he owns the record for
consecutive homers across two Series games, which again is 4.
Nomar Garciaparra holds the record
for consecutive home runs in the shortest time in terms of innings:
3 homers in 2 innings, on July 23, 2002, for the
Boston Red Sox.
Home run cycle
An offshoot of
hitting for the
cycle, a "home run cycle" is where a player hits a solo, 2-run,
3-run, and grand slam home run all in one game. This is an
extremely rare feat, as it requires the batter to not only hit four
home runs in a game (which itself has only occurred 15 times in the
Major Leagues), but also to hit those home runs with the specific
number of runners already on base. Although it is a rare
accomplishment, it is largely dependent on circumstances outside
the player's control, such as his preceding teammates' ability to
get on base, as well as the order in which he comes to bat in any
particular inning.
Though multiple home run cycles have been recorded in collegiate
baseball, the only home run cycle in a professional baseball game
belongs to Tyrone Horne, who stroked four long balls for the
minor league, Double-A
Arkansas Travelers in a game against the
San Antonio Missions on July
27, 1998.
A major league player has come close to hitting for the home run
cycle many times. The first was on April 26, 2005 when
Alex Rodriguez of the
New York Yankees hit 3 home runs off
Los Angeles Angels pitcher
Bartolo Colón. Rodriguez hit a
3-run home run, 2-run home run, and a grand slam in the first,
third, and fourth innings, respectively. He later, in the bottom of
the eighth inning, just missed a solo home run, lining out to
Jeff DaVanon in deep center field. The
second was on May 16, 2008 when
Jayson
Werth of the
Philadelphia
Phillies hit 3 home runs off
Toronto Blue Jays pitchers
David Purcey and
Jesse
Litsch. Werth hit a 3-run home run, a grand slam, and a solo
home run in the second, third, and fifth innings, respectively. On
June 26, 2009,
Andre Ethier of
Los Angeles Dodgers also came close to
hitting for the home run cycle when he hit a three-run home run off
Jason Vargas in the second, a two-run
home run off
Roy Corcoran in the sixth,
and a solo home run off
Miguel
Batista in the eighth inning in a Dodger home game against
Seattle Mariners.On July 7, 2009,
Chicago White Sox first baseman
Paul Konerko came within a three-run
home run of hitting the home run cycle. He hit a solo home run in
the second inning off
Cleveland
Indians pitcher
Jeremy Sowers, a
grand slam in the sixth inning off reliever
Chris Perez, and a two-run home run in the
seventh inning off reliever
Winston
Abreu.On April 2, 1997,
Tino
Martinez, first baseman of the
New
York Yankees, was a grand slam away from accomplishing this
feat in a 16-2 victory over his former team, the
Seattle Mariners. He hit a 3-run home run
in the 1st inning, a 2-run home run in the 3rd and a solo shot in
the 5th; all off starting pitcher
Scott
Sanders. He would get four more plate appearances that night,
three of which came with the bases loaded. He grounded out with the
bases loaded in the 6th and singled with a man on in the 8th. In
the 9th inning, he would come to bat twice with the bases loaded
where he first walked and later struck out to end the inning.
On August 1, 2009,
Andrew
McCutchen, center fielder of the Pittsburgh Pirates, hit a solo
home run in the first inning, a two run home run in the fourth
inning, and a three run home run in the sixth inning of a game
against the Washington Nationals in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He
had one final at bat in the game. Had he hit a grand slam in his
final at bat, McCutchen would have been the only major league
player in history to hit for the home run cycle in order - a solo
home run first, a two run home run second, a three run home run
third and a grand slam fourth.
History of the home run

Graph depicting the yearly number of
home runs per MLB game (blue line)
In the
early
days of the game, when the ball was less lively and the
ballparks generally had very large outfields, most home runs were
of the inside-the-park variety. The first home run ever hit in the
National League was by Ross Barnes
of the
Chicago White
Stockings (now known as the
Chicago
Cubs), in 1876. The home "run" was literally descriptive. Home
runs over the fence were rare, and only in ballparks where a fence
was fairly close. Hitters were discouraged from trying to hit home
runs, with the conventional wisdom being that if they tried to do
so they would simply fly out. This was a serious concern in the
19th century, because in baseball's early days a ball caught after
one bounce was still an out. The emphasis was on place-hitting and
what is now called "manufacturing runs" or "small ball".
The home run's place in baseball changed dramatically when the
live-ball era began after
World War I. First, the materials and
manufacturing processes improved significantly, making the ball
somewhat more lively. Batters such as
Babe
Ruth and
Rogers Hornsby took full
advantage of rules changes that were instituted during the 1920s,
particularly prohibition of the
spitball,
and the requirement that balls be replaced when worn or dirty.
Along with the baseball being easier to see and capable of being
hit farther, as the game's popularity boomed more outfield seating
was built, shrinking the size of the outfield and increasing the
chances of a long fly ball resulting in a home run. The teams with
the sluggers, typified by the
New York
Yankees, became the championship teams, and other teams had to
change their focus from the "inside game" to the "power game" in
order to keep up.
Prior to 1931, a ball that bounced over an outfield fence during a
major league game was considered a home run. The rule was changed
to require the ball to clear the fence on the fly, and balls that
reached the seats on a bounce became
ground rule doubles in most parks. A
carryover of the old rule is that if a player deflects a ball over
the outfield fence without it touching the ground, it is a home
run.

Polo Grounds foul line with guide
rope.
Also, until approximately that time, the ball had to not only go
over the fence in fair territory, but to land in the
bleachers in fair territory or to still be visibly
fair when disappearing behind a wall. The rule stipulated "fair
when last seen" by the
umpires.
Photos
from that era in ballparks, such as the Polo Grounds
and Yankee Stadium
, show ropes strung from the foul poles to the back
of the bleachers, or a second "foul pole" at the back of the
bleachers, in a straight line with the foul line, as a visual aid
for the umpire. Ballparks still use a visual aid much like
the ropes; a net or screen attached to the foul poles on the fair
side has replaced ropes. As with American football, where a
touchdown once required a literal "touch down" of the ball in the
end zone but now only requires the "breaking of the [vertical]
plane" of the goal line, in baseball the ball need only "break the
plane" of the fence in fair territory (unless the balls is caught
by a player who is in play, in which case the batter is called
out).
Babe Ruth's 60th home run in 1927 was
somewhat controversial, because it landed barely in fair territory
in the stands down the
right field line.
Ruth lost a number of home runs in his career due to the
when-last-seen rule. Bill Jenkinson, in
The Year Babe Ruth Hit
104 Home Runs, estimates that Ruth lost at least 50 and as
many as 78 in his career due to this rule.
Further, the rules once stipulated that an over-the-fence home run
in a sudden-victory situation would only count for as many bases as
was necessary to "force" the winning run home. For example, if a
team trailed by two runs with the bases loaded, and the batter hit
a fair ball over the fence, it only counted as a triple, because
the runner immediately ahead of him had technically already scored
the game-winning run. That rule was changed in the 1920s as home
runs became increasingly frequent and popular. Babe Ruth's career
total of 714 would have been one higher had that rule not been in
effect in the early part of his career.
The all-time, verified professional baseball record for home runs
for one player, excluding the U. S. Negro Leagues during the era of
segregation, is held by
Sadaharu Oh. Oh
spent his entire career playing for the
Yomiuri Giants in Japan's
Nippon Professional Baseball,
later managing the Giants, the
Fukuoka Softbank Hawks and the 2006
World Baseball Classic Japanese team. Oh holds the all-time home
run world record, having hit 868 home runs in his career. Major
League Baseball keeps running totals of all-time home runs by team,
including teams no longer active (prior to 1900) as well as by
individual players. The All-Time MLB Home Run total is expected to
reach 250,000 in late June 2009.
In
Major League Baseball, the
record is 762, held by Barry Bonds, who
broke Hank Aaron's record on August 7, 2007, when he hit his 756th
home run at AT&T
Park
off pitcher Mike Bacsik. Only
five other major league players have hit as many as 600:
Hank Aaron (755),
Babe
Ruth (714),
Willie Mays (660),
Ken Griffey, Jr. (622 and counting)
and
Sammy Sosa (609). The single season
record is 73, set by Barry Bonds in 2001.
Negro League slugger
Josh Gibson's Baseball Hall of Fame plaque says
he hit "almost 800" home runs in his career. The
Guinness Book of World
Records lists Gibson's lifetime home run total at 800.
Gibson's true total is not known, in part due to inconsistent
record keeping in the Negro Leagues. The 1993 edition of the
MacMillan
Baseball Encyclopedia attempted to compile a set
of Negro League records, and subsequent work has expanded on that
effort. Those records demonstrate that Gibson and Ruth were of
comparable power. The 1993 book had Gibson hitting 146 home runs in
the 501 "official" Negro League games they were able to account for
in his 17-year career, about 1 homer every 3.4 games. Babe Ruth, in
22 seasons (several of them in the
dead-ball era), hit 714 in 2503 games, or 1
homer every 3.5 games. The large gap in the numbers for Gibson
reflect the fact that Negro League clubs played relatively far
fewer league games and many more "barnstorming" or exhibition games
during the course of a season, than did the major league clubs of
that era.
Other legendary home run hitters include
Jimmie Foxx,
Mel Ott,
Ted Williams,
Mickey Mantle (who on September 10, 1960,
mythically hit "the longest home run ever" at an estimated distance
of , although this was measured after the ball stopped rolling),
Reggie Jackson,
Harmon Killebrew,
Ernie Banks,
Mike
Schmidt,
Dave Kingman,
Sammy Sosa (who has hit 60 or more home runs in a
season 3 times),
Mark McGwire,
Ken Griffey, Jr. and
Eddie Mathews.
The longest verifiable home run distance
is about , by Babe Ruth, to straightaway center field at Tiger
Stadium
(then called Navin Field and prior to the
double-deck), which landed nearly across the intersection of
Trumbull and Cherry.
The location of where Hank Aaron's record 755th home run landed has
been monumented in Milwaukee. The hallowed spot sits outside Miller
Park, where the Milwaukee Brewers currently play.
Similarly, the point
where Aaron's 715th homer landed, upon breaking Ruth's career
record in 1974, is marked in the Turner Field
parking lot.
Home run slang
Slang terms for home runs
include:
big fly,
blast,
bomb,
circuit clout,
dinger,
ding-dong,
dong,
donger four-bagger,
four-base
knock,
four-ply swat,
funk blast,
goner,
gonzo,
gopher ball,
homer,
jack,
long ball,
moonshot,
quadruple,
round-tripper,
shot,
slam,
swat,
tape-measure
shot,
tater,
wallop, and
yakerton.
The act of hitting a home run can be called
going deep or
going yard or
going home; additionally, with men
on base, it can be called
clearing the table. A
comparatively long home run can be described as
Ruthian,
named after
Babe Ruth's legendary drives.
Babe Ruth himself was often referred to as "The Sultan of Swat", a
nickname earned due to the number of home runs which he hit. The
act of attempting to hit a home run, whether successful or not, can
also be termed
swinging for the fences. A game with many
home runs in it can be referred to as a
slugfest or
home run derby. A player who hits a home run is said to
have "dialed 8", from the practice of having to dial 8 from a
hotel room
telephone
to dial long distance. A grand slam is often referred to as a
grand salami or simply, a
salami. With the increase of Latin American
players a home run is also being called the whole enchilada, or as
Kenny Mayne described it,
jónrun, the Spanish term for a home run.
Instant replay
In November 2007, the
general
managers of Major League Baseball voted in favor of
implementing
instant replay reviews
on boundary home run calls. The proposal limited the use of instant
replay to determining whether a boundary home run call is:
- A fair (home run) or foul ball
- A live ball (ball hit fence and rebounded onto the field),
ground rule double (ball hit
fence before leaving the field), or home run (ball hit some object
beyond the fence while in flight)
- Spectator
interference or home run (spectator touched ball after it broke
the plane of the fence).
On August 28, 2008, instant replay review became available in MLB
for reviewing calls in accordance with the above proposal.
It was
first utilized on September 3, 2008 in a game between the New York Yankees and the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field
. Alex
Rodriguez of the Yankees hit what appeared to be a home run,
but the ball hit a catwalk behind the foul pole. It was at first
called a home run, until Tampa Bay manager
Joe Maddon argued the call, and the umpires
decided to review the play. After 2 minutes and 15 seconds, the
umpires came back and ruled it a home run.
About two weeks later, on September 19, also at Tropicana Field, a
boundary call was overturned for the first time. In this case,
Carlos Peña of the Rays was given a
ground rule double in a game against the
Minnesota Twins after an umpire believed a
fan reached into the field of play to catch a fly ball in right
field. The umpires reviewed the play, determined the fan did not
reach over the fence, and reversed the call, awarding Peña a home
run.
Aside from the two aforementioned reviews at Tampa Bay, replay was
used four more times in the 2008 MLB regular season: twice at
Houston, once at Seattle, and once at San Francisco. The San
Francisco incident is perhaps the most unusual.
Bengie Molina, the Giants' Catcher, hit what
was first called a double. Molina then was replaced in the game by
a pinch-runner before the umpires re-evaluated the call and ruled
it a home run. In this instance though, Molina was not allowed to
return to the game to complete the run, as he had already been
replaced. Molina was credited with the home run, and two RBIs, but
not for the run scored which went to the pinch-runner
instead.
On October 31, 2009, in the fourth inning of Game 3 of the World
Series, Alex Rodriguez hit a long fly ball that appeared to hit a
camera protruding over the wall and into the field of play in deep
left field. The ball ricocheted off the camera and re-entered the
field, initially ruled a double. However, after the umpires
consulted with each other after watching the instant replay, the
hit was ruled a home run, marking the first time an instant replay
home run was hit in a playoff game.
See also
Career achievement list
References
-
http://bioproj.sabr.org/bioproj.cfm?a=v&v=a&bid=1066&pid=7516
- This rarely occurs in professional baseball, but is still
contained in the official rules:
http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/downloads/y2008/official_rules/07_the_runner.pdf
- This stipulation is in Approved Ruling (2) of Rule 7.10(b).
http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/downloads/y2008/official_rules/07_the_runner.pdf
-
http://www.baseball-almanac.com/teamstats/schedule.php?y=1957&t=BOS
- The Official Site of Major League Baseball:
History: Rare Feats
- Los Angeles Angels/New York Yankees Box Score
Tuesday April 26, 2005 Yahoo Sports, April 26,
2005
- Los Angeles Angels/New York Yankees Play by Play
Tuesday April 26, 2005 Yahoo Sports, April 26,
2005
- Toronto Blue Jays vs. Philadelphia Phillies - Play By Play
- May 16, 2008 - ESPN ESPN.com, May 16, 2008
- Seattle Mariners vs. Los Angeles Dodgers - Play By Play -
June 26, 2009 - ESPN ESPN.com, June 26, 2009
- Cleveland Indians vs. Chicago White Sox - Play By Play -
July 7, 2009 - ESPN ESPN.com, July 7, 2009
- April 2, 1997 New York Yankees at Seattle Mariners
Box Score and Play by Play - Baseball-Reference.com
Baseball-Reference.com
- http://www.baseball-almanac.com/feats/art_hr.shtml
-
http://milwaukee.brewers.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070607&content_id=2011893&vkey=news_mil&fext=.jsp&c_id=mil
- ESPN - GMs vote 25-5 to use replay to aid home run
decisions - MLB
-
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/gameday_recap.jsp?ymd=20080903&content_id=3412731&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=nyy
-
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20091031&content_id=7586236&vkey=news_mlb
External links