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does the batter come up with a fresh count the next inning?

2007-06-19 14:11:19 · 11 answers · asked by xane c 1 in Sports Baseball

I mean that he is thrown out by pitcher before the pitcher throws to the batter

2007-06-19 14:24:20 · update #1

11 answers

If the pitch is a called third strike, that is the 3rd out, the stolen base attempt is a no-play.

If the pitch is called a ball (meaning a walk), the base steal attempt and throw out is the third out, inning over.

The pitch leading to a base on balls (walk) is a live ball so the plays continue. If the pitch leads to a dead ball (hit-by-pitch or catcher's interference) the batter goes to first and the runner is sent back to second.

2007-06-19 14:15:01 · answer #1 · answered by jpbofohio 6 · 6 1

If a baserunner makes the third out while the batter is still at the plate (and doesn't end the game in doing so), the batter's plate appearance never concluded. He leads off the next inning with an empty (0-0) count.

Though "picked off" would be more appropriate. If the runner was thrown out by the catcher, the pitcher must have delivered a pitch, which was either Strike 3 (inning ends if the catcher doesn't muff it), a foul (runner must return), or Ball 4, in which case the batter's PA did conclude, he counts as a man left on base, the next inning will lead off with the next batter, and the runner gets called in to the manager's office after the game for some ear-chewing, stealing on a walk, the dolt.

2007-06-19 14:26:42 · answer #2 · answered by Chipmaker Authentic 7 · 0 0

If the caught stealing is the 0.33 out of the inning, specific, whilst the subsequent inning starts off. in any different case, the count huge form does not reset, even though it's going to be 3-2 if the batter took a ball and it would be a strike out-throw out double play if the pitch grew to become right into a strike or if the batter provided on the pitch. Please see the hyperlinks under for greater education approximately quite some baseball circumstances, stats, erc.

2016-11-06 23:39:22 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The same batter leads off the next inning with a brand new count, as if his at-bat the previous inning never existed.

2007-06-19 16:33:23 · answer #4 · answered by frenchy62 7 · 0 2

The batter that was up when the runner was caught stealing is up. and he starts with a fresh count.

2007-06-23 10:06:40 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes the batter comes up fresh the next inning.

2007-06-19 14:49:36 · answer #6 · answered by drunkbomber 5 · 0 3

the runner is out for one thing, and the inning is over. at the start of the team's next inning, the same batter is up (because he didnt make contact with the ball/strikeout)

2007-06-19 14:35:01 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

Yes

2007-06-19 15:00:19 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes the at bat counts. he either struck out or walked. and no he doesn't come up with a new count b/c he struck out or walked last inning.

2007-06-19 14:26:30 · answer #9 · answered by Randy R 1 · 1 2

yea inning is over

the next inning the hitter at the plate comes in with the count 0-0 and no one on base

2007-06-19 14:23:46 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

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