No. Its like it hit the ground.
The ball is in play like any other batted ball and is considered fair whether or not it ricochets into foul territory after hitting the pitcher. If the ball hits the pitcher on the fly and is caught by a fielder before it touches the ground, the batter is out. If a ground ball touches a pitcher and another fielder grabs it and throws the batter out at first base, the pitcher is given an assist on the putout.
You situation has nothing to do with passed balls. You are talking about the "uncaught third strike". And no, as long as the ball does not hit the ground it is considered caught. If the batter traps the ball and he gets it before it hits the ground, he caught it. Bobbling the ball and catching it is an out.
Yaa, if someone takes a catch then the batsman is out definitely.
If the ball hits the line, it is considered in.
The pitcher is considered the most important defensive player on the team in Baseball. The way he throws the ball will most likely determine the hits made.
A batted ball that hits the pitcher's mound (or any base) is considered a fair ball. A fair ball that lands out of play is considered a ground rule double.
If a tennis ball hits the line, it is considered in.
It is a ground ball.
If a volleyball hits the line in volleyball, the ball is considered to be in (any part of the ball).
Yes, it is considered a scratch if the cue ball hits the 8 ball in a game of pool.
No. You fool.
As long as the pitcher doesn't catch the ball.