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Image:Baseball diamond.svg — Full diagram with everything labelled and distanced; Image:Baseball diamond simplified.svg — Simplified to minimal labels and no distances; Image:Baseball diamond clean.svg — Clean image without any labels
Image:Baseball diamond.svg — Full diagram with everything labelled and distanced; Image:Baseball diamond simplified.svg — Simplified to minimal labels and no distances; Image:Baseball diamond clean.svg — Clean image without any labels; image:Baseball diamond ko.svg — Korean
Derivative works of this file: 2010 Proposed baseball fielding positions shift to defend Gerald Laird.png. Image:Baseball diamond.svg — Full diagram with everything labelled and distanced; Image:Baseball diamond simplified.svg — Simplified to minimal labels and no distances; Image:Baseball diamond clean.svg — Clean image without any labels
Image:Baseball diamond clean.svg — Clean image without any labels Licensing Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License , Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation ; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back ...
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The history of stadium design is varied; in the early history of baseball, there were no outfield fences, most "stadiums" were just a field with some bleachers on either side. It wasn't until the early 1900s that the first outfield walls were put on stadiums, mostly for fan safety (in the pre-wall era, fans would picnic in the outfield, and ...
The Play-o-Graph. The Playograph was a machine or an electric scoreboard used to transmit the details of a baseball game in the era before television. It is approximated by the "gamecast" feature on some sports web sites: it had a reproduction of a baseball diamond, with an inning-by-inning scoreboard, each team's lineup, and it simulated each pitch: a ball, a strike, a hit, an out, and so on.
1 foul out; 2 singles; 2 doubles; 1 triple; 1 home run; 1 balk; 1 stolen base; 1 hit-by-pitcher; Early "Batter-Up Baseball" deck, c. 1949, with instruction sheet/diamond diagram. Earlier decks omitted the balk, stolen base, and hit-by-pitcher, in favor of an additional ball, an additional double play, and an additional single.