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2torial #0542:
Learn2 Understand Baseball
(Continued)
Understand the basic objective
In a game of baseball, two opposing teams try to
score more runs than the other. A run is
scored when a team's player runs (in a
counter-clockwise direction) and steps on all three
bases and home plate, which is also known as
completing the circuit.. A game lasts nine innings
unless the score is tied. In that case it continues
for additional innings until one team breaks the
tie by scoring another run.
Each inning is broken down into two parts: the
top of the inning, and the bottom of the inning.
The visiting team is given the opportunity to score
runs in first section of the inning, known as the
top of the inning. The home team is given
the same opportunity in the latter half, or the
bottom of the inning. During this
opportunity to score, either team is known as
the batting team. When either team is
preventing the other team from scoring runs, it's
called the fielding team.
Each team's opportunity to score runs in an
inning are limited by outs. An out is an
action by the fielding team to remove temporarily a
batting team player from active play. (You'll read
several examples a little later.) Three outs in an
inning mark the end of a batting team's effort to
score runs.
Step
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