The level of Baseball is irrelevant. From Coach pitch to the majors, home plate is in fair territory. The reason why the plate is the only base that comes to a triangle is because that's the beginning of the foul lines as they extend out to foul pole--which is why the "arrow" of the plate never points to the pitcher.
Any ball that has not crossed 1st or 3rd base is not fair or foul until it is touched or goes completely out of play. It doesn't matter where the catcher is, it matters where he touches the ball.
The ball can hit the plate and bounce straight up or it could even hit behind the plate. If the catcher touches the ball directly over home plate, it's a fair ball.
Brady was a catcher on his high school baseball team and was drafted in the 18th round by the Expos in 1995.
A pitcher and catcher are called a 'battery'. A number in parenthesis next to a player's name would mean the inning the pitcher/catcher came into the game. The starting pitcher and catcher do not have a number in parenthesis next to their names.
Softball uses the same fielding as baseball, assuming you're talking about high school level and up. Pitcher, catcher, one player at each base plus a shortstop. Three in the outfield for a total of 9.
No, in "The Catcher in the Rye," Whooton School is a fictional prep school that Holden Caulfield had attended before being expelled. It is not described specifically as a private school for all boys in the novel.
The name of the school Holden Caulfield flunks out of in "The Catcher in the Rye" is Pencey Prep.
That depends on the school's rules. They are probably different based on your age as well.
He catches my Mom's school bus.
An old school-mate of Holden's.
When Bella drops her apple at school he catches it and that's what it is of
For a middle teen and high school catcher good is 1.7 seconds.
Brady was drafted in the 18th round by the Montreal Expos in the 1995 MLB draft. He played catcher in high school.
From the time the catcher touches the ball til the ball reaches 2nd for a good catcher is 1.6 to 1.7 seconds.