Yes, if an outfielder catches a ball and falls over the fence, it is considered a home run.
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An outfielder just cannot be jumping up against the wall/fence, I mean up onto the wall/fence.
It is still a home run no matter what.
Portcullis .
If the player holds on to the ball and it is determined that it did not touch the ground, it is an out. If the player drops the ball while falling over the fence, it is a home run. Added: To get more technical, I think as long as the fielder has his feet inside the area of the field of play, it would be an out. If the entire body (including feet) are over the fence when the catch is made, then it would be a home run. The above answer is wrong. If a fielder leaps and catches the ball before he touches dead ball territory the catch is good and the batter is out. It doesn't matter where he is in relation to the fence. He could be ten feet into dead ball territory and as long as he hasn't touched the ground, the catch is valid.
Nobody.
Yes, a fence is considered a structure because it is a constructed barrier that serves a specific purpose, such as marking a boundary or providing security.
The Lower fence is the "lower limit" and the Upper fence is the "upper limit" of data, and any data lying outside these defined bounds can be considered an outlier.
you should take it to the vet and get it looked at.
This is not a catch. The ball is now in play just like it went off the fence first, then into the glove. You can not make a catch off an object.
If there are 2 outs, and a fly ball is caught by an outfielder, that would be the 3rd out, ending the inning. If the outfielder then throws the ball into the stands, nothing would happen, because the inning would already be over and time would be out.
fence-sitters
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