No. In Game 1 of the 1954 World Series, the New York Giants' center fielder made a great throw to the infield that prevented two Cleveland Indians baserunners from making huge advances on the basepaths. The Giants went on to win the contest 5-2 in 10 innings and eventually swept the Indians in four games.
you catch the ball and if the runner has passed a base throw it to the next one.
A few feet behind the runner when they lead off. The shortstop could loop around instead of the third baseman if you want it to be a surprise.
in the MLB you can run to first if you swing on a third strike and the catcher does not catch it, he has to tag you or throw down to first, it's rare that the runner is safe
throw partys
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.
No, he could throw to home plate!
No it is no
MLB player Willie Bloomquist throws right.
yes
The runner is safe at third and the runner is safe at first.
Yes. A foul fly ball is no different than a fair fly ball. The runner at third can tag up and try for home after the catch and the defense can try to throw the runner out at third if she is not paying attention.
I say it this way: "I like to throw and catch a football."