British Soccer fan reacts to Baseball - MLB | Oddities

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
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    Link to the original video: • MLB | Oddities

Комментарии • 555

  • @EXE-Edits
    @EXE-Edits 4 года назад +78

    This is super late but I just found this video, love the reactions man appreciate the support!

    • @gopher6532
      @gopher6532 4 года назад +3

      Hi EXE

    • @Jacobswick
      @Jacobswick 3 года назад

      @Kairo Saul thanks for knowing I don’t give a shit

    • @thcluky5547
      @thcluky5547 Месяц назад

      And you thought you were late..

  • @Gantzz321
    @Gantzz321 4 года назад +91

    baseball gloves are not like a hockey stick, you don't just grab another one. A glove is worn into a player's hand over time, and they can last full careers. If something does happen to a glove they don't just get new ones, they have them repaired.

    • @williammcalpin8339
      @williammcalpin8339 4 года назад +7

      I had the same catchers mit and infielders mit from late in little league through 2 years of college. I got teary eyed handing them down to my nephew!

    • @tracyharris2617
      @tracyharris2617 4 года назад +9

      Came here to say the same thing when he mentioned just picking up a new one. I've had my glove for 20+ years. I love my glove. There is no way I'm breaking in a new glove unless I absolutely had to.

    • @randomsillinessx3
      @randomsillinessx3 4 года назад +2

      It can take a long time to break a new one in so they aren’t as likely to get a new one.

    • @blacktikitaka
      @blacktikitaka 4 года назад +2

      Greg Ward professionals do get new gloves all the time. They don’t get them every game but they do go through a decent amount of them

    • @Skittlesplat
      @Skittlesplat 4 года назад

      Hockey sticks are not interchangeable 🤦🏻‍♂️ there's a huge variation of flex and blade curve. That's why you see forty to fifty of them just behind the bench on the pathway in and easily another hundred in the locker room. Stick lengths are custom cuts, flex is specific to the player, same with curve.

  • @cris4daze
    @cris4daze 4 года назад +133

    17:15 one of them was wearing the wrong uniform

    • @rederik99
      @rederik99 4 года назад +2

      Agreed. Same teams, Chicago Cubs, just that one player wasn't matching the rest that day.

  • @milopop0006
    @milopop0006 4 года назад +228

    the Cubs and Cardinals (MLB teams) are playing in London this year on June 13-14th.

  • @metropcs8104
    @metropcs8104 4 года назад +117

    At 10:07 Tropicana Field has these catwalks that support the roof and sometimes balls get hit off of them or stuck

    • @Lucas-dj4qj
      @Lucas-dj4qj 4 года назад +17

      worst stadium in modern american sports

    • @carsoncavanaugh780
      @carsoncavanaugh780 4 года назад +1

      Dang bro you didn’t have to say that but it do be true

    • @crazyzippyfumblefish
      @crazyzippyfumblefish 4 года назад

      Lucas coliseum is worse (coming from a rays fan admittedly)

    • @MikeL-FL
      @MikeL-FL 4 года назад +3

      Wonder if they fixed the roof during the off-season? Or does it still rain in left center field?

    • @crazyzippyfumblefish
      @crazyzippyfumblefish 4 года назад +2

      @@MikeL-FL Hey, we can fix our roof but Oakland can't fix their foul territories.

  • @MattMajcan
    @MattMajcan 4 года назад +26

    the one with the mask sparking is one of my all time favorite clips.. just shows you how powerful a major league pitch really is

  • @garethelwig2395
    @garethelwig2395 4 года назад +94

    FUN FACT: The term “I’m in a pickle” or “being in a pickle” originates from the baseball pickle, meaning that you’re in a situation you very much don’t want to be in!

    • @mc-me2nu
      @mc-me2nu 4 года назад +3

      im pretty sure its the other way around

    • @jonstewart9792
      @jonstewart9792 4 года назад +5

      This is false the phrase originated in 17th century England.

    • @garrett9562
      @garrett9562 4 года назад +1

      Didnt know that other Garrett that's pretty cool

  • @hifijohn
    @hifijohn 4 года назад +33

    5:43 imagine someone tuning in at that moment.

  • @aidancathey5910
    @aidancathey5910 4 года назад +137

    Start a Discord so we can help you learn about the different sports

    • @aidancathey5910
      @aidancathey5910 4 года назад +10

      It's hard when you are reacting because you have to say the first thing that comes to mind. That's what makes his videos great is because they aren't preformulated or fake. And he has made some other connections faster than I would expect.

    • @jaydisqus3353
      @jaydisqus3353 4 года назад

      Or, Disqus. You can actually talk there.

  • @williambanks2223
    @williambanks2223 4 года назад +23

    15:59 If the ball would have stayed to the left of the base line, it would be a foul ball. It had to stay foul until it either stops or passes third base. It ruled back into the field of play so it was in play

    • @superdud42
      @superdud42 4 года назад +1

      William Banks also the fact that it happened before it made it passed 3rd base. Otherwise it’s automatically a foul

    • @Anon21486
      @Anon21486 4 года назад +1

      I was going to mention that it relies on the 1st base/3rd base. It the ball that lands into foul territory crosses the baseline before those two bases, it goes back into play. If it is after those bases, it remains foul.

  • @lazyradish
    @lazyradish 4 года назад +16

    Bats have a “sweet spot” - the most ideal spot to hit the ball. Anywhere off that is going to cause a bend. Do it enough or close enough to the handle and it will break. Old school bats were made out of hickory and wouldn’t break but they were heavy. Now everyone uses ash or maple wood which is a lighter but weaker wood.

    • @aquadonkey.
      @aquadonkey. 4 года назад

      @Scott Berg thats the first thought i had when he was asking why the bats break. With Rivera wasnt it basically just his spin rate that just shredded the bat on contact or something? Or just the direction of the spin combined with his insane 95mph cutter?

    • @gemoftheocean
      @gemoftheocean 3 года назад

      Hickory? NEVER. Ash.

    • @lazyradish
      @lazyradish 3 года назад

      @@gemoftheocean Babe Ruth (and a majority of the players in his era) would disagree.

    • @psymar
      @psymar 2 года назад

      @@aquadonkey. I think it was the fact that the spin made the ball curve so quickly that it was very hard to hit the bal with the sweet spot.

  • @SanFranFan30
    @SanFranFan30 4 года назад +58

    These are oddities and weird plays so no they aren't regular occurrences

    • @mavoc3094
      @mavoc3094 4 года назад +1

      Proofreading can be the difference between commenting what you mean versus commenting the opposite of what you mean.

    • @SanFranFan30
      @SanFranFan30 4 года назад

      @@mavoc3094 you right lol

  • @grindlebone
    @grindlebone 4 года назад +23

    Bats are also made out of wood, and they do have imperfections that lead to bats breaking

    • @jaykaufman9782
      @jaykaufman9782 4 года назад +5

      And batters routinely sand or plane down the handle to get a more comfortable grip, narrowing the narrowest part of the bat even more.

    • @crazyjack3357
      @crazyjack3357 4 года назад +1

      Plus the pat is made out of ash which does break a lot easier than other woods

    • @grindlebone
      @grindlebone 4 года назад

      @@crazyjack3357 Hence the old saying, 'Ash is the jello of woods'...

  • @GreenJeepAdventures
    @GreenJeepAdventures 4 года назад +1

    Of all the sports, baseball has the most opportunities for odd moments. It had a weird field/pitch, strange rules, unspoken rules, multiple ways to score, lots of positions and personalities. Its a sport where you don't even have to watch the game to enjoy it. It can just play in the background of a radio or in the words of a newspaper. Did I mention I love baseball, cause I do!

  • @divaluxe_
    @divaluxe_ 4 года назад +4

    I've been binge watching your videos and I love how open minded you are about American sports and how you understand how passionate we are about them! Keep up the great work!

  • @gr8t1bobo
    @gr8t1bobo 4 года назад +7

    One of the more oddest moments is when randy hit a bird while pitching.

  • @ZacheryTK
    @ZacheryTK 4 года назад +25

    A tip for future reactions: Please watch the entire clip before pausing and rewinding. A lot of your questions can (and will) be answered if you just let the clip play for another couple seconds.

    • @frighty
      @frighty 4 года назад +1

      Amen

    • @PerthTowne
      @PerthTowne 2 года назад

      And also, listen to the announcers calling the game in general. They are explaining it for the radio and TV audience, and they can tell you a lot.

  • @jpraiswater8625
    @jpraiswater8625 4 года назад +1

    "Stealing first" In baseball's earlier decades, a runner on second base could "steal" first base, perhaps with the intention of drawing a throw that might allow a runner on third to score (a tactic famously employed by Germany Schaefer). However, such a tactic was not recorded as a stolen base.

  • @Bubble_Cat
    @Bubble_Cat 4 года назад +1

    16:20 The white lines (running out from home plate to the yellow foul poles) are called "foul lines" - if the ball rolls/is hit outside of these lines or poles, they are considered to be a "foul ball" aka out of play (unless they are caught in the air, before the ball touches the ground), so in this scene the Catcher is waiting until the ball rolls from outside to inside the foul lines - then it becomes a fair ball to play and tag the batter out.

  • @peterbutler1113
    @peterbutler1113 4 года назад +1

    Venditte was the first ever "switch pitcher" - throwing right-handed to some batters and left-handed to others. It's never happened before in well over a century of baseball

  • @juggnuttz
    @juggnuttz 4 года назад +2

    at 15:56, the ball isnt called fair or foul till it goes past the base, or touched or stops moving. so while it was rolling in foul territory it was coming back fair, so the catcher let it roll and come back fair to tag out the batter/runner.

  • @bigidiotdumbstupidguy9329
    @bigidiotdumbstupidguy9329 4 года назад +1

    For the clip at 16:00 : The ball has to touch inside the lines along first and third to be counted fair, even if it bounces inside the line then goes out, that’s fair. But if the ball is hit and lands inside the line, then goes outside the line before passing first or third base, it’s a foul. So because the ball bounced inside the “fair side” along the third base line, the catcher waited to see if it would roll back into fair territory before touching it which lets him use it as a live ball to tag out the runner.

  • @richarddiamond1790
    @richarddiamond1790 4 года назад +1

    For the ambidextrous pitcher part, in baseball, it is common (5-10%) of batters are “switch hitters”. These batters are equally good at batting from both sides, righty and lefty. Generally, it is advantageous for the batter to bat on the opposite side as a pitcher, meaning that if the pitcher is left-handed, the switch hitter will bat from the right side. This skill is considered impressive, but not out of the ordinary.
    The oddity with Pat Venditte (the pitcher) is that he is equally good at pitching with both hands, and he’s the first one in the history of the league. So when he sees a right handed batter up, he uses this right hand to gain an advantage.
    The rule is for when a switch batter faces a switch pitcher, where in theory, the batter and pitcher would switch endlessly to gain the advantage. This actually happened in a minor league game, but not the MLB, when Venditte was pitching. It basically states the pitcher must declare his side first.

  • @NolmDirtyDan
    @NolmDirtyDan 4 года назад +2

    The guy who throws with 2 different hands, he is the only person to ever do that!!!! Nobody has the skill to be able to throw that accurately with both hands, if you didnt see, that rule you were reading, was literally called the Venditte rule, after the guy they were showing in the video

  • @matthewsalter9132
    @matthewsalter9132 4 года назад +18

    At 17:11 they were showing the guy on the left was wearing the wrong jersey

    • @QuestionableLifeChoices
      @QuestionableLifeChoices 4 года назад +1

      actually it was rizzo on the right wearing an old jersey lol. but yeah, i don't even know where he got that one, honestly. it's from quite a while ago

    • @TripleTHarris
      @TripleTHarris 4 года назад +2

      Questionable Life Choices no the pitcher was wearing the same one as rizzo it was lake wearing the wrong one

  • @thalloutboy
    @thalloutboy 4 года назад +1

    I’ll explain the play at 1:43, since it’s a convoluted play that even most baseball fans and players did not understood at the time.
    The runner at second (Segura) successfully made it out of the pickle and back to second base. However, the runner at first (Braun) advanced to second thinking Segura would be tagged out. As a result, they were on the same base. In the event that two runners are on the same base or one passes another, the trail runner is always at fault. So when the infielder tagged them both, Braun was out. Segura should have waited for a ruling from the umpire, but instead assumed that he was out. There is technically no rule disallowing a runner from advancing backward, so he was allowed to remain on first.

  • @ArtofFreeSpeech
    @ArtofFreeSpeech 4 года назад +1

    Okay, so on the play with the catcher who waited for the ball to come back into fair territory, a ground ball is not considered fair or foul until one of the following: 1)it goes past 3rd base (at which point if it's fair as it does so, it's a fair ball, if not it's a foul ball), 2) it stops rolling before it reaches 3rd base, at which point it's fair or foul based on where it stops 3) it's touched by a player.
    In this case, the catcher saw the ball START in foul ground, but then followed it as it rolled until it went into fair territory, then picked it up and tagged the runner out because the runner never ran to 1b. This is why you ALWAYS run the ball out!!!

  • @ndepas1
    @ndepas1 3 года назад +1

    The last ambidextrous part is extremely rare. To be able to pitch at a major league level with both hands is pretty unheard of.

  • @MJSweeney11
    @MJSweeney11 4 года назад

    Man, i really like you channel. I don't like a lot of reaction channels, but i love how open you are to other sports. So many people get defensive over their favorite sport and say, "oh this is so much better than this." or "your favorite sport sucks." I love how genuinely interested you are in sports you previously had no idea about. I'm a big sports fan period, i love football(american), baseball, basketball, hockey, racing( mainly NASCAR, but i really enjoy F1, INDYCAR, and some IMSA as well), it's refreshing to see.

  • @david-1775
    @david-1775 4 года назад +1

    Really like that you show major league baseball. Very fun game to play. It can sometimes get a bit long when you watch it but that is what highlights are for !

  • @aidancathey5910
    @aidancathey5910 4 года назад +1

    In general you can't go backward. But the phrasing of the rule allowes for a few exceptions. When the 2 players were at second, the guy that was originally at first was tagged out. But the guy originally at second thought he was out and started walking back toward the dugout. He realized he had been safe and stood on first. Because of the odd nature of the play he was able to (accidentally) exploit a loophole. This has only happened a handful of times since the 1880s in professional baseball.

  • @BJ-bm3vz
    @BJ-bm3vz 4 года назад +2

    The San Antonio Spurs Tribute - The Beautiful Game. The title says it all, The Spurs have been one of the most consistent winning teams of the last couple decades (minus the last few years lol). This team faced a lot of tough teams and a lot of legendary players in their prime. In 2014 they got themselves all the way to the finals for the second straight year except this year they were unstoppable. This teams offense was legendary, every man on this roster was extremely well coached and moved the ball really well. It didnt matter how fast you were, you cant outrun a pass. So everyone passed, and passed, and passed some more until they found an open shot. I dont think we will see an NBA roster this well coached and locked in for a long time. Theres a part 1 and a part 2 Playoff Finals version I really think you should check one of them out. You wont regret it.

  • @operator0
    @operator0 4 года назад

    At 19:45
    You will notice the rule is called the Vendetti rule and the pitcher's name is Vendetti. That is not a coincidence. That pitcher is the only person to pitch ambidextrously that the game has even seen. There have been a lot of ambidextrous hitters (switch hitters) in the game, but no one has ever been an ambidextrous pitcher (switch pitcher) until Vendetti came along.
    The rule was instituted when Vendetti was in the minor leagues (feeder leagues for the MLB) and he was pitching to a switch hitter. The batter would line up as if he were hitting with one hand and Vendetti would then line up as if he were pitching with one hand, then the batter would switch sides before Vendetti would throw and then Vendetti would switch which hand he would throw. This continued for like 10 minutes without a single pitch being thrown, the batter and the pitcher playing this weird king of the hill game. Finally, the umpire had had enough and made the two make a decision and stick with it. There was no rule in the game prior to that, so the umpire kind of made up a rule on the spot.
    Of course, right after that game, MLB drafted the official rule, named after that pitcher, that said the pitcher must first declare which hand he will use and then the batter can chose which side he will bat from. It's a pretty funny story.

  • @MattMajcan
    @MattMajcan 4 года назад +1

    for the one at 16:14, the rule is that the ball is foul if its on the outside of the white line when it passes the base.. so technically even if the ball goes foul, if it comes back into fair territory before it crosses the base then its a fair ball. normally that shouldn't be possible but in this case the ball took some weird bounces off some pebbles or pieces of dirt and came back fair so the catcher played it.

  • @ktoliman
    @ktoliman 4 года назад

    2:04 the announcer says "he's going to be _picked off_ " which is a strategy pitchers use to A, force base runners to stay close to the bag, making the distance between the runner and the next base further, B, Force an out. Incidentally, although base runners will lead off (take a few extra steps towards the next base) so they have a better chance to steal, it can also be a strategy to get the pitcher off their rhythm by putting pressure on them, resulting in a bad pitch, or an error in a pick off attempt.
    however, when a base runner is stuck between two bases, they are indeed, in a pickle.

  • @bazzer124
    @bazzer124 4 года назад +1

    prior to reaching either third or first base, any ball hit foul that returns to the playing field is a fair ball, which is why Swisher was tagged out...

  • @rederik99
    @rederik99 4 года назад +1

    Baseball players would never just replace their glove like that (the clip where it went over the wall). I've heard from professionals that they usually only have one or two gloves in rotation. One is their game glove, it's broken in nice, feels like an extension of your hand. If you feel like your game glove is going to need replacing within the next 6 months, then you start breaking in a new glove during practice. The glove is so important to some of the insane feats that Baseball players accomplish, they would never go with something untested, mid-game.

  • @j.frankparnell
    @j.frankparnell 4 года назад +1

    Pickle is actually known as a run down. The term pickle is the name of the game kids play that is basically a run down game. If not enough kids to play ball you can play pickle so rundowns are sometimes called playing pickle

  • @Lewis9709
    @Lewis9709 3 года назад

    17:49 the reason this is an oddity is because that guy is the first and only switch (ambidextrous) pitcher in Major League history. There are lots of switch hitters, but there's never been a switch pitcher. They had to create a special glove for him with a right and left thumb.
    This is a huge advantage because in baseball a right handed pitcher is more effective against a right hand batter, and a lefty pitcher is more effective against a left hand hitter. The reason is that off speed pitches from RH pitchers move away from RH hitters, and same with lefty pitchers-hitters, while those same pitches move towards a hitter who bats opposite making them easier to hit.
    A lot of times if a right handed pitcher is starting the opposing manager will load his lineup with LH hitters, and vice versa. This is one reason managers will often replace hitters, or pitchers in clutch situations, depending on the L-R matchup. You always want your hitter to be opposite(R-L, L-R) of the pitcher, and your pitcher to the same as the hitter(R-R H-H).
    So an ambidextrous pitcher will always have a slight advantage over whoever's hitting. Like I said this guy was the first switch pitcher in MLB history.

  • @dustinheese
    @dustinheese 4 года назад

    A bat breaks down over time and can generate a few cracks or chips that eventually split along a seam in the grain. Occasionally a crack starts on a seam and the bat splits quickly. Different wood breaks differently, some popular bats break off into large chunks, some into small pieces. If a bat breaks off at the handle, it's usually from a "jam shot", which is when a pitcher throws it inside and the batter swings as the ball hits the skinny part of the bat. Pitch speed and off-the-bat speed vary depending on the pitcher, pitch velocity, pitch location, batter, and batter timing, with the average pitch speed being 91 mph and the average off-the-bat speed being 103 mph.

  • @jacksprat418-ju5qo
    @jacksprat418-ju5qo 4 года назад

    I have watched baseball for 44 years and still see something new a couple of times a season.

  • @tylerwayman4316
    @tylerwayman4316 4 года назад +1

    Love your videos dude, you're such a nice guy. Also we need "fair play" merch!!

  • @jordand8290
    @jordand8290 4 года назад +1

    I've had the pleasure of getting coached by Marlon Byrd, the Phillie who snapped his bat with a swing @10:37, and he's always told me nothing was wrong with the bat. it was just one of those freaky things that happens when someone is incredibly strong

  • @operator0
    @operator0 4 года назад

    At 15:57 the foul ball that rolled fair. The way foul balls work in baseball is;
    -If the ball touches the ground inside the white lines anywhere on the field, it's fair.
    -If the ball touches the ground outside the white line and stays outside the white line anywhere on the field, then it's foul.
    -If the ball touches the ground outside the white line but further than where the bases are (the outfield) and roles into fair territory, it's still a foul ball.
    -If the ball lands outside the white line before it gets past the bases (the infield) and roles fair after it passes the bases (the outfield), then it's a foul ball.
    -If the ball touches the ground outside the white line, but before the ball goes past the bases (the infield), but roles back into fair territory before it passes the bases (still the infield), it's fair.
    The last one is what you saw and it rarely happens.

  • @Posirep
    @Posirep 4 года назад

    The last one was of Pat Venditte. They had to make up a rule just for him because he's the first and thus far only pitcher to pitch with either right or left hand.
    There was a sequence in the Minor leagues where he and a switch hitter kept switching sides for several minutes until the umpires had enough of it and forced him to pick a hand. The rule came in shortly after.

  • @ticnatz
    @ticnatz 4 года назад

    That Segura play is one of the oddest plays allowed in baseball. Very nuanced. That was not only the same game, it was the same series of play. Look into Little League. They mention it during that Dexter Fowler glove over the wall play. Broken bats are quite common. Sometimes it's merely the strength of the batter that snaps bats. The catcher equipment has been called 'the tools of ignorance' for 100 years. Look that one up. You saw sparks on that play. On the line is fair play. The balk, always by a pitcher, is one of the hardest things to understand about baseball. That's a special glove worn by Venditte so he can pitch with either arm. That is extremely rare in baseball. Baseball can be so unusual some times.

  • @wil404
    @wil404 4 года назад +1

    Fans won't get to keep a glove unless a player gifts it. MLB teir gloves cost probably around $400, at least. Plus pro gloves take a lotta work to break in. Players usually use a glove at least for 1 season. And they only have a backup in case their main glove unexpectedly breaks for a game/ becomes unrepairable. Fans can keep balls hit/ thrown into stands.

  • @juliantorres3239
    @juliantorres3239 4 года назад +1

    Thx for finally reacting to this been requesting it for a while

  • @TIGERMAN85
    @TIGERMAN85 4 года назад +1

    15:00 If the batter swings and foul tips the ball, it's a strike. But a foul tip can't be strike 3 unless the catcher, catches the ball. Otherwise, you can foul tip the ball all you want.

  • @johnschauder
    @johnschauder 3 года назад +1

    I think that spark was one of the welds breaking on the cage of the face mask and then the metal wires that make up the cage slamming together.

  • @goversyoutube7174
    @goversyoutube7174 4 года назад

    just found all of these videos loving the interest from over seas i love soccer and a lot of american sports baseball included and just so nice to see people show an interest in one of my favorite sports, thanks for the videos man!

  • @pushpak
    @pushpak 4 года назад

    16:59 "A balk will be called when a pitcher who is on the rubber makes any motion naturally associated with his pitching delivery and does not actually deliver the ball, feigns a throw to first or third base and fails to complete the throw, or fails to step directly toward a base before throwing to that base. Once a pitcher has swung his free leg back past the pitching rubber while in the process of his leg kick, he must then deliver the ball to the plate or to second base on a pick-off attempt."

  • @Brodycubs
    @Brodycubs 4 года назад

    The last clip was of the first ambidextrous pitcher in the MLB. He can pitch with either his left or right hand. In baseball, in general, Right handed batters hit better against left handers "lefties" and left handed hitters hit better against right handers "righties". So then brings in switch hitters, who can bat from either side of the plate. They will bat according to what the pitcher is, a righty or lefty. If the pitcher is a lefty the switch hitter will probably bat right handed and vice versa. So then enters the switch handed pitcher. They will throw left handed to lefties and right handed to righties until they encounter a switch hitter.. That's why that rule was shown. The pitcher has to choose which hand he is going to pitch with first and the switch hitter will then go he opposite. There was one situation when the pitcher and hitter were just switching sides over and over so they were in a standoff.. Also why the rule now exists. Hopefully that made sense and was clear enough.

  • @RubenLopez-ey5dv
    @RubenLopez-ey5dv 4 года назад

    I love seeing your understanding of the game progress as you watch more videos!

  • @jvblhc
    @jvblhc 4 года назад

    I'm really enjoying your reactions to the various baseball videos you are showing.

  • @timjester8555
    @timjester8555 4 года назад

    About the pickle play, a base runner cannot pass the runner ahead of you or you are called out, the lead runner returned to 2nd base, and both were tagged while safely standing on the base. The second runner passed the lead runner, ( or actually in this case, the lead runner backed up beyond the second) causing the second runner to be called out. The lead runner( pickle guy) was never tagged off the base, therefore he is still in play. You can retreat to a previous base as long as you touch each base in reverse order.

  • @cecilbutcher9595
    @cecilbutcher9595 4 года назад

    At 3:01 the lead runner is always safe when there are two runners. The second runner was tagged out even if he is on the base. Since the lead runner was on the base when he was tagged he was safe and got all the way back to first without being tagged.

  • @alexcantu2785
    @alexcantu2785 4 года назад

    Breaking the bat is a mix of the power of the throw, power of the batter, the grain of the wood and where exactly it hit the ball

  • @cassandrasherwood5759
    @cassandrasherwood5759 4 года назад

    The thing with the ball on the line-- if it's on the outside of the line, it's a foul ball and counts a strike. If it's inside the line, then it's playable and he can either run to first (if he's paying attention) or get tagged out (if he's not, which is what happened).

  • @rktaker
    @rktaker 4 года назад +2

    *luka talking while announcers are explaining what happened*
    luka: wait what?

  • @PerthTowne
    @PerthTowne 3 года назад

    To answer your question about the play at about 16:13: The ball off the bat rolled into fowl territory, but it rolled back into fair territory. The batter didn't run, because he thought the ball was fowl. So when it rolled fair, the the catcher scooped it up and ran over to tag out the batter.

  • @jkatz1303
    @jkatz1303 4 года назад

    16:00 the white lines mark fair & foul territory (basically boundary lines for the ball) and in this case, the catcher was waiting for the ball to roll back into fair territory so he could then get the batter out. If the ball is in fair territory before passing 1st base, or 3rd base, it is a live ball and is played. If it goes foul before passing the base, it is just a foul ball

  • @drabarski
    @drabarski 4 года назад

    Its a mix of power and the movement of the pitch that leads to most broken bats. The pitch most likely to break a bat is the cutting fastball. The late break on this pitch increases the chances of it hitting the thin part of the bat while moving faster than a true breaking ball. Thus, it destroys more bats than any other pitch. Miriano "Sandman" Rivera was notorious for breaking opposing hitters bats with cutters.

  • @mypenisisunbelievablysmall6491
    @mypenisisunbelievablysmall6491 4 года назад

    The reason the bat breaks is normally the speed of the ball breaking the bat after it hits the narrow part of the bat, but the one you watched actually the player was so strong it broke on the swing, the ball never made contact with the bat, just pure strength

  • @Cliff00936
    @Cliff00936 4 года назад +2

    My favorite baseball Oddity is when Randy Johnson threw the ball and hit a bird.

    • @SydRainn
      @SydRainn 4 года назад +1

      that one will probably always be my favorite

    • @gemoftheocean
      @gemoftheocean 3 года назад

      Yeah, and it happened in Canaduh(!) and he was brought up on charges there for allegedly intentionally killing the obviously suicidal bird. Sheesh.

  • @granta3044
    @granta3044 4 года назад

    The game before the pitch, between a baserunner and pitcher is awesome. Guys like Ricky Henderson and a few out there today own pitchers.

  • @williammcalpin8339
    @williammcalpin8339 4 года назад +1

    A ball is neither fair (in play) or foul (out of play) until either a player touches the ball or it passes first or third base.
    If it's touched if fair territory it's a fair ball. If it passes first or third in fair territory it's a fair ball and vice versa.
    Lesson is to always run out your hits.

  • @jansonshrock2859
    @jansonshrock2859 3 года назад

    3:37 when a runner on a base goes backward and passes the runner behind him, it is the runner behind him that is out and the lead runner can keep going back, that is why the guy on second base (Ryan Braun) was out but not the lead runner
    Edit: it IS possible for more than one runner to be at a single base, but the play can't end with more than runner at a base

  • @thalloutboy
    @thalloutboy 4 года назад

    Fair/foul rule (with the 3B line as an example)
    If the ball has not reached third base, then it is ruled fair or foul based on where it was first touched by a fielder. If it has passed third base without being touched by a fielder, it is based on the first bounce after it passes third base.
    In that clip, the ball initially rolled foul, but the catcher didn’t touch it. The spin caused the ball to return to fair territory, at which point the catcher picked it up (making it a fair ball) and tagged out the hitter.
    Note that if the ball is caught before it hits the ground, it does not matter if it’s fair or foul.

  • @Doug4422
    @Doug4422 Год назад

    That shine was sparks, that tells you the power, and speed of MLB pitching.

  • @matthewwilliams9347
    @matthewwilliams9347 4 года назад

    The bat breaks because of the the power of both the pitcher and hitter, but the main thing is where on the bat you hit it as well. The handle and the end of the bat are the most common culprits because it doesn’t hit the “sweet spot”

  • @nicholashe1198
    @nicholashe1198 4 года назад +1

    Pickles don’t happen often but occur enough to warrant teams to practice them on defense

  • @JPJohnson4
    @JPJohnson4 4 года назад

    Bats breaking in baseball is pretty common. The bat by rule has to be a solid piece of wood, so with the speed of the bat and ball combined it can often crack. When it cracks it becomes a lot easier to completely break while simultaneously not being as effective at hitting the ball. So to answer your question, yes it is both the speed of the pitch and the speed of the swing. To demonstrate how powerful hits are, most of the best hitters in baseball have an exit velocity (speed of the ball after it makes contact with the bat) of up to 110-120 mph.

  • @rileyandmike
    @rileyandmike 4 года назад

    So many things to help you with here!! The ball into the mask is a catch. The pieces that came off the other mask was a visor (like sunglasses), the Uniforms that you didn’t know what was happening - a player on one team was wearing a different jersey than the rest of the team, that last one - the pitcher was ambidextrous and pitched lefty to one batter and then righty to the next

  • @fartzinacan
    @fartzinacan 4 года назад

    16:00 the batter thought that the ball was going to be foul, that's why he was walking off and getting ready for the next pitch. If the ball crosses the baseline between home plate and either first base or third base, it is ruled a foul ball. The ball was rolling foul but came back into fair territory (inside the baselines) when the catcher picked up the ball and tagged him out.
    Now, Ilif the ball lands outside of the white baselines but beyond first and third (between the base and the warning track or outfield walls), the ball is fair and in play.

  • @willcrabtree9561
    @willcrabtree9561 4 года назад +14

    You should react to MLB collisions. Some of them are just nasty

  • @drakedbz
    @drakedbz 3 года назад

    The white lines are called "foul" lines. If you hit the ball and it lands outside the line, it either counts as a strike (if you don't already have two) or you get another pitch. The thing is, if the ball rolls back over the line on the inside of the bases (the "infield"), it is again considered fair, and that play continues. That guy thought he hit it foul, so he didn't run. When it rolled fair, the catcher picked it up and ran it to the batter to tag him out.

  • @josh-ym8oi
    @josh-ym8oi 4 года назад +1

    16:18 so the white line is the foul ball line and if the balls gets touched on the left side it’s dead and it just counts as a strike but if it’s to the right it’s a hit and the runners have to run So on that play everyone thought it was foul so nobody ran but the catcher let it roll fair so he could pick it up and tag the runner

  • @Doug4422
    @Doug4422 Год назад

    If a pitcher breaks his delivery to the mound, and doesn't release the ball toward the plate, it's called a balk, and the batter is awarded first base, and any base runners, they are allowed to advance one base.

  • @dylanwatson9430
    @dylanwatson9430 4 года назад

    The reason that wooden bats break is most often due to the player holding them improperly. The bats are generally strongest when they hit the ball with the sides of the grain oriented towards the ball. Wood is strongest in the direction parallel to the grain (this is just a feature you'll have to look up more details if youre curious). If a bat connects with the face of the grain it is weaker and therefore more likely to break.

  • @LiveFromThePorcelainPalace
    @LiveFromThePorcelainPalace 4 года назад

    Usually when a bat breaks, it's when the ball hits down near the handle of the bat.
    And the pitcher who had the sprinklers go off on him was Hall of Famer Pedro Martinez. I was at that game :D

  • @AdderTude
    @AdderTude 4 года назад

    Luka, if the ball hasn't rolled beyond the base down either foul line, the ball can still roll back fair. Peña smartly waited for the ball to roll back onto the foul line, which then made the ball playable. The same clip was used in "knowing the rules" compilations.

  • @superdud42
    @superdud42 4 года назад

    At 3:21. It was an interesting situation because he tried stealing 2nd and there was already a runner in second. When the ball was passed to second base it made the runner who was already there out. Therefore the runner who was trying to steal that base was still in, and he made it back to “his” base at first before they tagged him

    • @superdud42
      @superdud42 4 года назад

      I should’ve watched it for 1 more minute because you figured it out pretty much exactly lol

  • @GH-oi2jf
    @GH-oi2jf 3 года назад

    The factors influencing the length of a hit are the energy of the pitch, the energy of the bat, but also the position on the bat that strikes the ball. Energy transfer from the bat to the ball will be most efficient at a particular distance along the bat.

  • @bobbysmith6988
    @bobbysmith6988 4 года назад +1

    Bats get broken usually if the ball hits the bat at a weak point or away from the barrel (the largest section of the bat).

  • @mypenisisunbelievablysmall6491
    @mypenisisunbelievablysmall6491 4 года назад

    16:10 the white line determines if it is a fair or foul ball. If the baseball touches the white chalk line at all it is a fair ball, meaning it is still in play, and the batter didnt run because he thought it would stay a foul ball, so he was easily tagged out

  • @lexismith8325
    @lexismith8325 4 года назад +2

    So many of these involved the nationals lmao my team is such a team of chaos.

  • @jkatz1303
    @jkatz1303 4 года назад

    Last clip, the pitcher was ambidextrous, which is something that is extremely rare in baseball. Plenty of batters can hit from both sides, but seeing a pitcher throw with both arms is almost never seen

  • @CrowsNestPlainsDream
    @CrowsNestPlainsDream 4 года назад

    Last part of the video: The Pitcher couldn't change hands until he was done pitching to that single batter after he could switch these ways the pitcher or pitching team couldn't have an advantage. There are advantages pitching right to a left batter to right pitches or left batters.

  • @frankisfunny2007
    @frankisfunny2007 4 года назад +1

    ambidextrous pitchers, or switch pitchers are a rarity. I think Pat Venditte is the first switch pitchers in 50-60 years in the MLB. I could be very much wrong.

  • @itsjustbaseball1986
    @itsjustbaseball1986 4 года назад +1

    10:58 it depends to where its pitched or if your late or early inside pitches usally break wood bats more

  • @david-1775
    @david-1775 4 года назад

    Bats break when the ball hits the bat at a weak point, generally just above the grip on the handle. The thick part is called the barrel.

  • @fallofcamelot
    @fallofcamelot 4 года назад

    Explaining the ambidextrous pitcher. In baseball it is an advantage for a pitcher if they are pitching to a player who has the same handedness as the batter. Therefore in general left handed pitchers do well against other lefties and vice versa.
    Vanditte was a young pitcher who hit on the idea of pitching with both hands, left handed against lefties and right handed against righties. This was fine until Vanditte came up against what’s called a switch hitter, which is to say a hitter who can hit from both sides. By all accounts there was a comical merry go round as the pitcher would switch and then the batter would do likewise going back and forth. The umpires had to step in to make a ruling.
    Later that week MLB issued the clarification that they read out in that clip. Basically it says the pitcher has to choose which hand to throw with and then the batter can choose which side to hit from. It became known as the Venditte rule.

  • @lazyidiotofthemonth
    @lazyidiotofthemonth 4 года назад

    That ambidextrous player had his own rule written for his situation, traditionally switch batter have the advantage because the can always switch to the opposite handed side, and get a slight advantage in batting, Venditte's rules comes from an incident three or four years earlier where he and a Switch Batter kept switching side when the other switched and the head umpire had to make a ruling since it was not a situation covered in the rule book and it was delaying play.

  • @sparkyshore3543
    @sparkyshore3543 4 года назад

    10:48 it’s a physics thing. If you the ball hits the bat hard enough near an antinode, the bat will vibrate so wildly that it just shatters.
    Of course, sometimes the bats are just defective.

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube 4 года назад

    With the one you didn't understand, the hitter thought it was a foul ball, which is a ball not between the lines, which is a doover, so he did run. The ball is foul if it passes the bases in foul territory. But before then, you can let it roll. if the ball is first touched on or between the lines before it passes the bases, it is a fair ball. In that play, he saw the batter wasn't running, so he let the ball roll. As soon as it hit the line, he picked it up amd got him out. Had the batter been running, he would have picked it up in foul territory so it would have been a foul ball.

  • @chrisdaly6023
    @chrisdaly6023 4 года назад

    the confusing situation with the bases is called Tagging Up... you have to run the bases in the proper order (1st 2nd 3rd home) but if a ball is hit in the air and caught you must go back and tag the base you started on before advancing. This is why some people will just stay on the base and once the ball is caught they run.. however others will go ahead and begin to advance in case the ball isnt caught for some reason. Hope this makes sense

  • @idontlikemustard0
    @idontlikemustard0 4 года назад

    16:10 the white line in called the foul line in baseball. if it goes to the left of the line it’s a foul ball, if it’s on the white line or to the right of the line it’s a fair ball. on that play, the ball was originally foul, but the catcher let it roll onto the white line meaning it is fair. the batter expected it to stay foul, but since it ended up on the foul line, it’s considered a fair ball, meaning the batter just needed to be tagged to get the out. hoped this helped :)

  • @goldosprey
    @goldosprey 4 года назад

    you can go backwards if your going back to tag up. however if runners pass each other, the runner that gets passed is out. On the Segura play, he originally had second so Braun was tagged out, Segura was allowed to go back to 1st if he wanted to cause Braun was out. In some situations, the runner misses the bag going back, and they can tag the base they didn't and get him out. The rules is whoever had the base first is safe

  • @arcanask
    @arcanask 4 года назад

    16:07 This rule is kinda funny at first, but it works. If a ball is hit outside the sidelines it's a foul. If a fielder catches that, though, it is still considered an out. If the ball is hit along the ground and it rolls or bounces over the line before it crosses first or third base it is considered a foul, but if it makes it past said bases and then goes out of the line it is considered fair and still in play. If the ball is, say, bunted and rolls out then manages to roll back in it is fair and in play.