i think Daniel Ray Herrera 5"6" http://cincinnati.reds.mlb.com/team/player.jsp?player_id=502609
A bunch. In fact, the vast majority of major league pitchers have never thrown a no-hitter in major league baseball. Many more have thrown no-hitters in high school or college ball.
In 18 U Gold softball and collegiate softball, the distance from the plate to the pitching mound is 43 feet. This is because the pitchers at these levels throw much faster than the pitchers in the lower levels. In high school at 14U - 18U the pitching distance is 40 feet. Notice there is a difference between 18U and 18U Gold level.
Yes; but you do not have to go to college; you can get drafted as soon as you're out of high school.
Molly Pitcher believed that taxes were too high .
Each league (little league, high school, college) has its own limits as far as how many players can be on a team. In Major League Baseball, there are 25 players on a team.
6" high.
40 or 43 feet
In Major League Baseball, the pitching distance from the pitcher's mound to home plate is 60 feet, 6 inches. This distance has been standard since 1893 and is used for all levels of professional play. The mound itself is 10 inches high, which adds to the challenge for batters facing pitchers.
I believe that by high-school, they use MLB regulation length bases and mounds. Saying this, it should be 60'6''.
60 feet.
60
The distance from home plate to the pitcher's mound in Little League is 46 feet. High school, college, and Major League Baseball standard is 60 feet and 6 inches (a mistake in measuring long ago but was left that way). Pitcher's mound distances are ALWAYS measured from the front of the rubber to the rear tip of home plate.
My son was on the grouds crew for a AAA minor league team, and I saw them build a mound in the indoor batting cages. I was told by the head grouds keeper that the mound is 12 " above home plate with a 1" fer foot drop going from the mound toward home plate. Also, the top area of the mound, a 24" circle is totally flat around the mound, something I never knew before.
60' 6" (standard distance for high school and up)
43 feet
A bunch. In fact, the vast majority of major league pitchers have never thrown a no-hitter in major league baseball. Many more have thrown no-hitters in high school or college ball.
In Major League Baseball, the distance from the pitchers mound to home plate is 60 feet, 6 inches. does that mean from the edge of pitching rubber to the very edge of the home plate or to their center..i.e. 60 feet 6 inches....