It all depends on your umpire and the age group. The umpire gets to pick how large or small the strikezone is. As the ages get older however the strikezones seem to get smaller.
Softball and baseball are different for several reasons. First off the ball size of a softball and baseball are different. A softball is bigger than a baseball. Also a softball is yellow and a baseball is white. Also the dimensions of the field are different. In softball the bases are 60 ft apart and the baseball bases are 90 ft apart. The fences vary and the pitchers mounds for different leagues in both, but in baseball both the pitching mound and the fences tend to be a further than in softball. The pitching motions of the two are also different. In baseball one pitches overhand and in softball they pitch underhand. The games have the same basics concept, but differ a great deal.
In most tournaments in which I play it is runs scored against but it does vary among the different leagues.
A league is usually about 3.5 miles. The definition does vary from country to country.
Bat differential is the length to weight comparison of a bat. It's usually shown as a negative number and can also be called a "drop". For example, a bat that is 33 inches long and weighs 30 ounces has a differential of (-3). Rules for legal bat differentials vary by league, but typically senior leagues and little leagues allow larger differentials.
That's a pretty vague question. There are numerous rules pertaining to offensive and defensive substitutions, and they vary between the American and National leagues (mainly because of the DH rule). Most of the substitution protocols are covered in rule 3.
Yes which it shouldn't be, in the top flight this is in anyway it will vary going down the leagues
That's a pretty vague question. There are numerous rules pertaining to offensive and defensive substitutions, and they vary between the American and National leagues (mainly because of the DH rule). Most of the substitution protocols are covered in rule 3.
Vocabulary will vary in different regions of America.
i think it does vary
Yes. Wind can vary in both speed and direction at different elevations. This variation is called wind shear.
because they provide different strnght in different region
It means the results may vary depending on what people use in the test, or what the measure it at. Vary means 'might be different'.