Jump to content

On-deck

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A player waits to bat in the on-deck circle.

Inbaseball,on-deckrefers to being next in line tobat.In a professional game, the batter who is on deck traditionally waits in a location in thefoul territorycalled theon-deck circle.

Gabriel Cancel of theOmaha Storm Chasersunfurls the on-deck circle during a game atWerner Parkin 2022.

Beingon-deckonly guarantees the batter will get a chance to bat in the inning if there are fewer than two outs, and the number of outs plus the number ofbaserunners(including the one at bat) adds up to fewer than three, because adouble playortriple playcould occur. Additionally, themanagerreserves the right to pull the on-deck hitter for asubstituteat his discretion.

The player next in line to bat following the on-deck batter is colloquially referred to as beingin-the-hole.

On-deck circles[edit]

Diagram of on-deck circles (shown in pink)

There are twoon-deck circlesin the field, one for each team, either circle can be used by either team, positioned in foul ground between home plate and the respective teams' benches. The on-deck circle is where the next scheduled batter, or "on-deck" batter, warms up while waiting for the current batter to finish his turn. The on-deck circle is either an area composed of bare dirt; a plain circle painted onto artificial turf; or often, especially at the professional level, made from artificial material, with a team or league logo painted onto it.

According toMajor League Baseball rulesandNCAAbaseballrules, there are two on-deck circles (one near each team'sdugout). Each circle is 5 feet (1.5 m) in diameter, and the centers of the circles are 74 feet (23 m) apart. A straight line drawn between the centers of the two on-deck circles should pass 10 feet (3 m) behind home plate.[1][2]In the Official Baseball Rules published by Major League Baseball, the on-deck circle is referred to as the "next batter's box".[1]

Significance in save situations[edit]

Arelief pitcherwho comes in to pitch when his team is ahead can earn asaveif the tying run is either on base, at bat,or on-deck,and the pitcher then finishes the game without giving up the lead.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^abc"Official Baseball Rules"(PDF)(2021 ed.).Major League Baseball.Retrieved13 April2022.
  2. ^"Baseball Rules of the Game".NCAA.org.NCAA.Retrieved13 April2022.

External links[edit]