A baserunner that is hit by a batted ball is also out.
Interference is also an out.
Fly out, actually two possibilities for interference (hit mitt or move into throwing line), batting out of order, passing another runner on the bases.
baseballGuru says:
Other than the obvious, and Joe Morgan's 9 ways. We have come up with a few more.:
1. wild pitch
2. passed ball
3. hit by pitch
4. sac fly
5. sac bunt
6. hit
7. balk
8. catchers interference
9. strike out, dropped ball by catcher, runner safe at first
10. fielder's choice
11. fielder's interference, runner on third running home
12. wild throw to third pick off attempt
13. error
14. infield fly rule, runner advances at own peril
15. fan interference, usually home run type ball
16. walk
17. steal home
18. umpire's interference
Answer #3 is only correct if it is the batter that is hit by a pitch. Then the runner at 3rd is forced home since the hit batter takes the place of the runner at 1st and forces the other runners to move up one base.
Let's see..... a walk if the bases are loaded. A balk, a sacrifice fly, stolen base, homerun, single, double, triple, attempted pick off, passed ball by the catcher. How's that!,
a hit, a sacrifice bunt, a bunt, batter hit by pitch, steal home, an error, batter strikes out but the ball gets away from the catcher
When a batter strikes out but the ball gets away from the catcher, that is cosidered a pass ball. There is also a wild pitch.
Hall of Fame second baseman Joe Morgan has pointed out that there are 9 ways a runner can score from 3rd base with less than two outs. These would apply whether or not any other bases were occupied. I believe this is Joe's Ninefold Base Path:
1. a hit
2. a sacrifice hit (bunt or "squeeze" play)
3. a sacrifice fly
4. an error (examples: an error on a batted ball, an error in attempting
to pick the runner off base, the catcher's wild throw attempting to catch another runner stealing)
5. a fielder's choice (examples: an ordinary groundout, a batter being put out
at first on a dropped 3rd strike, the other runner caught stealing as part
of a double steal, "the defensive team's indifference")
6. a balk by the pitcher
7. a wild pitch
8. a passed ball by the catcher
9. a stolen base (i.e., steal of home base)
These are the 9 possible scoring decisions to account for the runner's advance in the official scorer's report.
Read more: How_many_different_ways_can_a_runner_score_from_third_base
You can just run home on a play, steal home, tag up, or be walked home (If the pitcher walks someone on loaded bases)
By being hit by a hit ball in fair territory off.By being tagged as he leads off.By running back to the third base bag after another runner is already standing on it.By intentionally interfering with the play.By running out of the base lines.By failling to touch the bag as he passes it.
4 Runs score. The Batter, The runner on 1st, The Runner on 2nd and the runner on 3rd.
If you ever pay close attention to the base coaches, you'll notice that many of them hold a stopwatch. They do exactly what the scouts do. They time the runners. This helps the base coach determine whether or not it's safe to give the runner the sign to steal or if he can wave him around 3rd to score. The scouts, of course, use their stopwatches strictly to see how long it takes a runner to get from base to base.
Just milling though this in my mind, I can think of ten: Sacrifice fly Fielder's choice Base hit Wild pitch Passed ball Steal of home Squeeze bunt Error on a fielder (throwing or fielding) Ground out Balk by pitcher Sounds right to me. However, in this situation, a groundout IS a fielder's choice. A Balk, Single, Double(regular or ground rule), Triple, Home Run, Fielder's Choice, Sacrafice Fly, Sacrafice Bunt, Error (over throw and bobble), Wild Pitch, Passed Ball, Stolen Base (straight steal and/or drop 3rd strike), Walk with the bases loaded, Catchers Obstruction with the bases loaded, Hit by Pitch with the bases loaded... 15 ways I can think of (going by the way you'd score the run scoring).
2 home runs ==== There are two runs that score. One run is the person on base and the second run is the person who hit the home run.
In kickball, there are four bases - first base, second base, third base, and home plate. The batter kicks the ball and runs to each base in order to score points for their team.
Well in baseball you score runs. There is many ways you can score a run. Here are some ways: 1.) Homerun, 2.) A triple and then someone hits a single/double/homerun/sac fly, 3.) Two doubles in a row, 4.) A single and then a triple or homerun, and 5.) A batter gets a triple and then the pitcher throws a wild pitch and the runner scores.the technical answer is to have a runner or a batter/runner touch home plate safely after touching all 3 bases in order 1st 2nd 3rd than touch home before 3 outs are recordedThere are many ways to score in baseball.
The batter is credited with a double, so his batting average will increase. The out would be scored as any other out is scored. It depends on what happened on the play. If, for example, the batter hit the ball down the right field line, and the ball is fielded by the right fielder. He throws to the second baseman, who then throws to the third baseman for the out at third, the scoring would be 9-4-5.
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.
Two bases from the base the runner occupied at the time the wild throw was made.
Conceivably four although it may be officially ruled something else such as a stolen base, wild pitch, pass ball, or error if anyone other than a runner forced in from third scores. Ball 4 is considered in play and runners may advance at their own risk if they are not being forced forward. Example: Bases loaded, pitcher throws ball 4 very wide of the plate and it goes to the backstop. The runner coming from third scores automatically off the base on balls. The runner on second notices the wild pitch and scores before the catcher can recover the ball. On the same play, the batter-runner tries to move up to second. The catcher throws the ball in to center field while trying to put him out. The center fielder reacts slowly and makes a bad throw and the batter and remaining runner continue around the bases and score. Officially, walk-wild pitch-E2-E8. Unofficially, a grand slam walk.