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  2. Baseball field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseball_field

    In roughly the middle of the square, equidistant between first and third base, and a few feet closer to home plate than to second base, is a low artificial hill called the pitcher's mound. This is where the pitcher stands when throwing the pitch. Atop the mound is a white rubber slab, called the pitcher's plate or pitcher's rubber.

  3. Weeks into baseball season, Paterson high schools still can't ...

    www.aol.com/weeks-baseball-season-paterson-high...

    The dugouts remain in storage, the portable pitching mound needs to be set up, and the left field fence hasn’t been installed, officials said. Field preparation is the responsibility of the ...

  4. Ballpark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballpark

    The infield is a rigidly structured diamond of dirt and grass containing the three bases, home plate, and the pitcher's mound. The space between the bases and home is normally a grass surface, save for the dirt mound in the center. Some ballparks have grass or artificial turf between the bases, and dirt only around the bases and pitcher's mound.

  5. Pier 40 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pier_40

    The portable mounds (as opposed to a permanent dirt mound) were required to maintain the multi-purpose status of the field. In 2008, after lobbying by the nearby Stuyvesant High School, a new mound was purchased from an Iowa-based company that was 18 feet (5.5 m) in diameter. The new mound, consisting of a center and two side pieces, was the ...

  6. After much anticipation, Letcher builds teener baseball ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/much-anticipation-letcher...

    Jun. 4—LETCHER, S.D. — A project five years in the making, Letcher now has its own teener baseball team. In the past, the community with approximately 160 people about 20 miles north of ...

  7. Bullpen car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullpen_car

    The first bullpen car introduced in Major League Baseball (MLB) was "a little red auto" used by the Cleveland Indians in 1950 at the large Cleveland Municipal Stadium.The Chicago White Sox followed suit in 1951, becoming the first team to transport the pitcher from the bullpen all the way to the pitcher's mound. [1]