Rules

From BR Bullpen

Introduction[edit]

The Rules of baseball are the laws which govern how the game is played on the field. At almost all levels of play, from Little League to the World Series, the rules are based on the Official Rules of Major League Baseball.

The Official Rules are devised by the Official Playing Rules Committee of Major League Baseball, which is currently chaired by Sandy Alderson and includes current and former players, umpires and executives, plus an advisory member from amateur baseball, in recognition of the fact that the rules are used much beyond MLB or even the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues. The committee makes yearly recommendations for changes or adjustments to the rules, announced at Baseball's Winter Meetings, although those are usually relatively minor, in contrast with other major sports. In fact, until the introduction of the tiebreaker, motivated by the Coronavirus pandemic in 2020, the last major change to the rules had probably been the introduction of the designated hitter for the 1973 American League season.

History[edit]

The rules of baseball trace their history back to the New York rules established by Alexander Cartwright in 1846 for the first organized baseball game played on June 19th at the Elysian Fields in Hoboken, NJ between the Knickerbockers and the New York Nine. While many aspects of the game have changed since that historic day, the basic configuration of the rules remain, such as the nine players per team, the basic shape of the playing field and the layout of the bases, the alternance of innings after three outs, etc.

The development of the rules can be divided into four periods:

  1. The Early Days (1846-1870), when the game was largely played by amateurs, with no real central authority controlling baseball's development. The rules tended to be fluid in those days.
  2. The Early Professional Rules (1871-1892). With the creation of the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players in 1871, there was a need for a first standardization of the rules, so that clubs from all over the country could play one another. However, pitching was still done underhand, first from a distance of 45 feet, then from 50 feet in 1881, while the number of balls required for a base on balls fell gradually from 9 to 4 in 1889.
  3. The Modern Pitching Era (1893-1919). With the pitcher's mound being moved back to its present distance of 60 feet 6 inches in 1893, the appearance of overhand pitching and the allowing of substitutions, the game started to take a shape very close to the modern one. There was also a rapid evolution in equipment, such as the introduction of fielding gloves and catchers' protective gear.
  4. The Live Ball Era (1920-present). The major change to the rules was the banning of the spitball and other unorthodox pitches as well as the modern definition of foul balls in 1920. The rules have been fairly stable since that time, with the major changes being the end of the bounce home run in 1931, the definition of the strike zone (which changed a number of times), the introduction of the designated hitter in 1973, and the extra innings tiebreaker in 2020. Other changes include the introduction of new statistics such as the sacrifice fly and the save.

The Major League Rules[edit]

The Official Rules are divided into 10 chapters which cover the following matters:

Further Reading[edit]

  • Paul Dickson: The Unwritten Rules of Baseball: The Etiquette, Conventional Wisdom, and Axiomatic Codes of Our National Pastime, HaperCollins Publishers, New York, NY, 2009. ISBN 978-0061561054
  • Dennis Goodman: RuleGraphics: Professional Baseball, Coffeehouse Development LLC, 2015. ISBN 978-0996110501
  • Chris Landers: "10 bizarre baseball rules you won't believe actually existed", Cut4, mlb.com, May 22, 2015. [1]
  • Chris Landers: "Why is a game 9 innings? These are the backstories behind baseball's iconic rules", "Cut4", mlb.com, January 4, 2017. [2]
  • Daniel R. Levitt and Mark Armour: Intentional Balk: Baseball’s Thin Line Between Innovation and Cheating, Clyde Hill Publishing, Clyde Hill, WA, 2022. ISBN 979-8-9852-6326-8
  • Norman L. Macht: "Why Some Baseball Rules Need An Overhauling", Baseball Digest, December 1988, pp. 59-62. [3]
  • Peter E. Meltzer: So You Think You Know Baseball ? A Fan's Guide to the Official Rules, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York, NY, 2013. ISBN 978-0393344387
  • David Nemec: The Official Rules of Baseball Illustrated: An Irreverent Look at the Rules of Baseball and How They Came to Be What They Are Today, Sports Publishing LLC, New York, NY, 2020. ISBN 978-1-6835-8323-3 (Originally published in 1999)
  • Bob Nightengale: "Rob Manfred, MLB considering radical changes to game", USA Today Sports, August 18, 2016. [4]
  • Wayne Stewart: You're the Umpire: 139 Scenarios to Test Your Baseball Knowledge, Skyhorse Publishing, New York, NY, 2010. ISBN 978-1602397934
  • Glen Waggoner, Kathleen Moloney and Hugh Howard: Spitters, Bean-balls and the Incredible Shrinking Strike Zone: The Stories Behind the Rules of Baseball, Triumph Books, Chicago, IL, 2002.

Related Sites[edit]