if he gets a strike he is out. and after 4 balls you walk
No, you need three strikes for one out. It depends though on what happens on that third hittable pitch.
In baseball, this is when the batter has a 'count' of three balls and two strikes. It is called a full count because the batter cannot get another ball or strike without the at bat ending ... one more ball will cause a base on balls (walk) and one more strike will be a strikeout.
six...3 balls and 3 strikes, or 2 strikes and 4 balls.
The first two foul balls count as strikes 1 and 2. After that, it is not a strike.
Three strikes in a row is a turkey. You can't throw three balls at the same rack of pins because all pinsetters sweep the lane clean after you throw two.
In the last frame you get a chance of bowling 3 balls. You can get three strikes, a strike and a spare (a spare is two balls) or a spare and a strike.
strike zone is a conceptual three dimensional right angle pentagonal prism over home plate which defines the boundaries through which a pitch must pass in order to count as a strike when the batter does not swing or swings and miss.
3 if you get two strikes or a spare. otherwise, only two.
The absolute lowest score would be 60. First frame - Strike Second frame - Two Gutter Balls Third frame - Strike Fourth frame - Two Gutter Balls Fifth frame - Strike Sixth frame - Two Gutter Balls Seventh frame - Two Gutter Balls Eighth frame - Two Gutter Balls Ninth frame - Two Gutter Balls Tenth frame - 3 Strikes (Total points here = 30)
When the umpire or TV announcer calls the ball and strike count, the balls come first. If you hear the announcer say something like "The count on the batter is 2 and 1" this means there are 2 balls and 1 strike.
a snowman has two or three balls