
Baseball is a bat-and-ball game played between two teams of nine
players each who take turns batting and fielding.
The offense attempts to score runs
by hitting a ball thrown by the pitcher with a bat and moving counter-clockwise
around a series of four bases: first, second, third, and home plate. A run is
scored when a player advances around the bases and returns to home plate.
Players on the batting team take
turns hitting against the pitcher of the fielding team, which tries to prevent
runs by getting hitters out in any of several ways. A player on the batting
team who reaches a base safely can later attempt to advance to subsequent bases
during teammates' turns batting, such as on a hit or by other means. The teams
switch between batting and fielding whenever the fielding team records three
outs. One turn batting for both teams, beginning with the visiting team,
constitutes an inning. A game comprises nine innings, and the team with the
greater number of runs at the end of the game wins.
Evolving from older bat-and-ball
games, an early form of baseball was being played in England by the mid-18th
century. This game was brought by immigrants to North America, where the modern
version developed. By the late 19th century, baseball was widely recognized as
the national sport of the United States. Baseball is now popular in North
America and parts of Central and South America and the Caribbean, East Asia,
and Europe.
In the United States and Canada,
professional Major League Baseball (MLB) teams are divided into the National
League (NL) and American League (AL), each with three divisions: East, West,
and Central. The major league champion is determined by playoffs that culminate
in the World Series. The top level of play is similarly split in Japan between
the Central League and Pacific Leagues and in Cuba between the West League and
East League.
The evolution of baseball from older
bat-and-ball games is difficult to trace with precision. A French manuscript
from 1344 contains an illustration of clerics playing a game, possibly la
soule, with similarities to baseball. Other old French games
such as thèque, la balle au bâton, and la balle empoisonnée
also appear to be related. Consensus once held that today's
baseball is a North American development from the older game rounders, popular
in Great Britain and Ireland. Baseball Before We Knew It: A Search for the
Roots of the Game (2005), by David Block, suggests that the game originated
in England; recently uncovered historical evidence supports this position.
Block argues that rounders and early baseball were actually regional variants
of each other, and that the game's most direct antecedents are the English
games of stoolball and "tut-ball". It has long been
believed that cricket also descended from such games, though evidence uncovered
in early 2009 suggests that cricket may have been imported to England from Flanders.
The earliest known reference to
baseball is in a 1744 British publication, A Little Pretty Pocket-Book,
by John Newbery. It contains a rhymed description of "base-ball" and
a woodcut that shows a field set-up somewhat similar to the modern game—though
in a triangular rather than diamond configuration, and with posts instead of
ground-level bases. David Block discovered that the first
recorded game of "Bass-Ball" took place in 1749 in Surrey, and
featured the Prince of Wales as a player. William Bray, an
English lawyer, recorded a game of baseball on Easter Monday 1755 in Guildford,
Surrey. This early form of the game was apparently brought to
North America by English immigrants. Rounders was also brought to the continent
by both British and Irish immigrants. The first known American reference to
baseball appears in a 1791 Pittsfield, Massachusetts, town bylaw prohibiting the
playing of the game near the town's new meeting house. By 1796, a
version of the game was well-known enough to earn a mention in a German
scholar's book on popular pastimes. As described by Johann Gutsmuths, "englische
Base-ball" involved a contest between two teams, in which "the
batter has three attempts to hit the ball while at the home plate." Only
one out was required to retire a side.

Alexander Cartwright, father of
modern baseball
By the early 1830s, there were
reports of a variety of uncodified bat-and-ball games recognizable as early
forms of baseball being played around North America. These games were often
referred to locally as "town ball", though other names such as
"round-ball" and "base-ball" were also used.
Among the earliest examples to receive a detailed description—albeit five
decades after the fact, in a letter from an attendee to Sporting Life
magazine—took place in Beachville, Ontario, in 1838. There were many
similarities to modern baseball, and some crucial differences: five bases (or byes);
first bye just 18 feet (5.5 m) from the home bye; batter out if a hit ball
was caught after the first bounce. The once widely accepted
story that Abner Doubleday invented baseball in Cooperstown, New York, in 1839
has been conclusively debunked by sports historians.
In 1845, Alexander Cartwright, a
member of New York City's Knickerbocker Club, led the codification of the
so-called Knickerbocker Rules. The practice, common to
bat-and-ball games of the day, of "soaking" or
"plugging"—effecting a putout by hitting a runner with a thrown
ball—was barred. The rules thus facilitated the use of a smaller, harder ball
than had been common. Several other rules also brought the Knickerbockers' game
close to the modern one, though a ball caught on the first bounce was, again,
an out and only underhand pitching was allowed. While there are
reports that the New York Knickerbockers played games in 1845, the contest now
recognized as the first officially recorded baseball game in U.S. history took
place on June 19, 1846, in Hoboken, New Jersey: the "New York Nine"
defeated the Knickerbockers, 23–1, in four innings. With the
Knickerbocker code as the basis, the rules of modern baseball continued to
evolve over the next half-century.
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