No. He will get to bat again in the next inning.
An inning, in Baseball, is one round of play. Each team have half of the inning up to bat, and once that teams gets three outs, it is either the second half of the inning or the end of the inning and the beginning of the next one. There are a total of nine innings in a game of baseball, unless the score is tied and that game goes into extra innings.
Whomever you want
The first baseman is often thrown the baseball at the end of an inning because they are typically closer to the pitcher's mound, making it a shorter throw. This allows for a quicker and more efficient return of the ball to the pitcher to start the next inning.
An inning is when each team gets a turn to bat with 3 outs. The visiting team bats first in an inning, and once they have gotten out 3 times, then the home team takes it's turn to bat with 3 outs. Once the inning is over you move onto the next inning, until you've played the last one. They're 9 innings in baseball.
The game is then considered suspended and will resume at a later date, generally the next day.
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He can't. He can only be knocked out on strike three, tag-outs (which accurs when a fielder with the baseball tags the batter), or fly-outs (which a fielder catches the baseball before it touches the ground). However, if a fielder catches the baseball before it touches the ground, but it touched the ground before it was hit by the bat, then it's still fly-out.
Catcher's "Speed up Rule": with 2 outs, or an inning about to end, if your catcher for next inning is on base, remove him for a pinch runner and get their Catcher's Gear on before your team goes out to the field defensively.
Yes he would. Any count that he would currently have will be cleared at the start of the next inning.
If he comes in while his team is batting and he bats, he's called a pinch-hitter. If he just replaces a fielder the next inning, then he's a substitute.
It is impossible to determine when or where the next hurricane will be.