127 feet
YES ... throwing a ball to an unoccupied base is a balk ...
When hit by right hand-ers (the majority of batters) it means the ball was pulled that direction and is going much faster. So the 3rd baseman must have fast reflexes. Also the 3rd baseman then has to make the throw to 1st base. This is a far throw and the 3rd baseman must have a strong accurate arm.
If you have a Nunchuk, hold the direction of the base you want to throw to. Right=1st, Up=2nd, Left=3rd, Down=Home. If you don't have a Nunchuk, you can use horizontal remote.
Yes. The batter would be credited with an at bat and an RBI.
2nd base...
That would depends on where they field the ball. Howeverthe distance from the 3rd base bag and the 1st base bag is just under 85 feet.
75 mph
it's 63.72 ft
third base
The official scorer would have to determine if the throw was catchable. If the throw was, then the error would be on the first baseman and he would be charged as such. If on the other hand the throw was a bad one and the first baseman had to reach and could not catch the ball, then the error is on the pitcher. Only one error would be charged even though the base runner advanced two base and scored.
"K" Meaning strikeout, but the ball touched the ground during the swing of the 3rd strike, therefore becoming a live ball (drop 3rd strike) thus allowing the batter to run to 1st base (as long as 1st base is Unoccupied) and try to beat the tag or throw. The catcher ( position 2) then threw the ball to 1st base (position 3) for the out. Hence "K 2-3" is recorded in the score book.
"K" Meaning strikeout, but the ball touched the ground during the swing of the 3rd strike, therefore becoming a live ball (drop 3rd strike) thus allowing the batter to run to 1st base (as long as 1st base is Unoccupied) and try to beat the tag or throw. The catcher ( position 2) then threw the ball to 1st base (position 3) for the out. Hence "K 2-3" is recorded in the score book.