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Summary: Know when to swing the bat! Learn where the strike zone is in baseball, in this free video.
Ben Graham was an outstanding high school and collegiate baseball player where he won all-conference honors. Currently he coaches summer high school teams and offers private lessons...read more
As American as apple pie, baseball is a part of our history and culture. Although it seems the sport was developed in Britain, the Americans made it their own. A professional league was started around 1865 has grown since and is known as America’s pastime. The popularity of the game continues to grow and spread around the globe.
In this video series, our baseball expert shows the basics of the game. Even if you know nothing of the game, this series will have you up to bat in minutes! Learn all of the training points you need to step on the field and play! Need to know about baseball equipment? It is covered here. You will also learn everything from how hold the bat, hit the ball, and run the bases. To put you in the know, our expert will walk through the basic rules of the game too. This video series is sure to score a home run!
" Hi my name is Ben. I’m here to discuss some of the basic rules to the game of baseball. What we are going to start out with is the idea of a strike zone. And a strike zone is the stretch from this inside half of the plate to the outer half of the plate and it will go a ways up to about a little above your belt and maybe a little be below your knee caps. And the strike zone is going to determine whether or not a pitch is a ball or a strike; and ultimately an out or a walk. So, as a hitter if a ball passes through the strike zone and I don’t swing the Umpire is going to call it a strike. If the ball passes through anywhere else; high, down in the dirt, low anywhere that is not in this imaginary zone it’s going to be called a ball. So that’s the only way that a ball is going to be called if it’s not in the strike zone. Where as a strike can be called if a ball is in the strike zone; we don’t swing if a ball is anywhere else and we swing and miss or if we make contact with the ball and foul it off to the right of this foul line here and to the left of this foul line here; that’s also a strike. So the three ways to record a strike a foul ball, a swing and a miss or taking a pitch. Taking a pitch means basically not swinging at a pitch that goes through the strike zone. So hitters are allotted two strikes; on the third strike they are out unless they foul it off in which case they are not penalized. You can foul off as many pitches in a row without being called out. It’s only when you swing and miss or when you let a ball go through the strike zone and you don’t swing and it’s called a strike. Pitchers on the other hand are allotted three balls; on the fourth ball the hitter gets to walk. Basically that means they get a free pass to first base and get to go to first base. And like I just discussed, there is only one way to get a ball, to record a ball is to have a pitch cross the plate but not cross into the strike zone. So, say I’m hitting, I get a ball up around my head or a ball outside or a ball in the dirt, that’s three balls and one more ball I get a free pass to first base."
eHow Article: Baseball Strike Zone
Comments
anumpire said
on 10/21/2008 1996 - The Strike Zone is expanded on the lower end, moving from the top of the knees to the bottom of the knees.
1988 - "The Strike Zone is that area over home plate the upper limit of which is a horizontal line at the midpoint between the top of the shoulders and the top of the uniform pants, and the lower level is a line at the top of the knees. The Strike Zone shall be determined from the batter's stance as the batter is prepared to swing at a pitched ball
Contrary to what the "Expert" says, the zone is not "a little above the belt"
Did the guys in the videos do any research?