In the event of a batted ball being hit on the fly and was caught by an Infielder or Outfielder on the fly before it hit the ground, it will be ruled as a Fly Out and in the event of there being no outs, one out or two outs and in the event of there being runners on base, runners will have to return to their original bases prior to the pitched ball before they can advance to the next base.
No, the bases are treated like part of the ground.
Out? What else?
Tornadoes that are on the ground are simply referred to as tornadoes.
The ball is in play like any other batted ball and is considered fair whether or not it ricochets into foul territory after hitting the pitcher. If the ball hits the pitcher on the fly and is caught by a fielder before it touches the ground, the batter is out. If a ground ball touches a pitcher and another fielder grabs it and throws the batter out at first base, the pitcher is given an assist on the putout.
when u dive for the ball right before it touches the ground
Santa clause
A funnel cloud is typically visible before a tornado touches down
When a cloud touches the ground, it is known as fog. Fog occurs when the air near the ground cools and reaches its dew point, causing water droplets to condense and create a cloud-like appearance at the surface.
Any backward pass (which is what a lateral would be) that is not caught is a fumble in both the NCAA and the NFL.
When a funnel cloud touches the ground it becomes a tornado.
Sometimes that happens when the battery is low, try recharging it and the trying it on a flat ground (not brick)
Yes, normally this happens to planes on the ground when a tornado strikes an airport.