Ummm... 60 feet 6 inches.
Should be regulation MLB baseball length. 60 ft 6 in.
It's 60 feet 6 inches away from home plate. The original baseball field designers wanted it to be 60 feet but when the "landscapers" were reading the diagram drawn up it read 60 ' 0" and they read the 0 to be a 6 by mistake.
Different distances were experimented with in order to find the optimal distance. The current distance has been proven to be perfect for giving pitchers and hitters no unfair advantage over eachother.
The year the pitching mound was introduced and the pitching distance was moved to 60 feet, 6 inches was 1893.
You start at the pointy end of home plate and measure 60 feet 6 inches towards second base. That is where you would place the front of the pitcher's rubber. Then from the middle of the pitcher's rubber you measure 18 inches towards home plate and mark that spot. Measure an 18 foot radius around the marked spot. That is the pitcher's mound boundary. To make sure you're correct, you would then measure from the front of the mound to the front of the pitcher's rubber. It should equal 11 feet 6 inches.
sixty feet six inches
60 feet 6 inches
the distance from the pitchers mound to home plate is 60 feet 6 inches.
it is 40 feet from the pitchers mound to home plate
This has been asked before... The answer is:How_far_is_it_from_the_pitchers_mound_to_home_plate
60 feet
The pitcher's mound is 10 inches higher than homeplate.
60 feet and 6 inches between home plate and pichers rubber
The pitcher's plate (or rubber) is 10 inches higher than home plate.
70 feets
in high school, the distance was changed this year from 40 to 43 feet. this gives the hitters an advantage
Unless they've recently changed it, distance from the rubber to the center of home plate is sixty feet, six inches.