Wiki User
∙ 10y agoI think from 10u-13u it is 85 feet. I don't know any of the others.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoWiki User
∙ 10y ago40 feet.
I'm assuming you mean USA baseball. The distance between home plate and the pitcher's rubber (the center of the mound) is 60 feet 6 inches. The distance between each base around the diamond is 90 feet.
The distance of 90 feet (between home and first) is the distance of the middle of the plate and the middle of first base.
The distance between third and home is 90 feet. First to second, and second to third are also 90 feet each.
75 ft.
99 feet. You can find the distance between home and second on any baseball or softball field by using the following formula: A squared plus B squared equals C squared. A is the distance between home and first base B is the distance between first base and second base C is the distance between home and second base.
According to (See Related Link) it is 127 feet 3 3/8 inches between home plate and second base. The distance between the pitcher's mound and home plate is 60 feet 6 inches. Therefore, the distance between the pitcher's mound and second base is 66 feet 7 3/8 inches.
The distance is always measured from the point or tip of the plate.
60 feet, 6 inchesCorrect AnswerAges 13 and up is 43 feet, 11 and 12 is 40 feet while 10 and under is 35 feet. These are 2011 distances.
The distances between the plates are 90 feet. The distance between home plate and first base is 90 feet. First base to second base is 90 feet. Second base to third base is 90 feet. Third base to home plate is also 90 feet. Additionally, the distance between first and third base straight across is 127 feet.
It is touching it, so there is no distance between them.
Pythagorean Theorem. We know its 90 feet between the bases, and we know that you're describing a right triangle, so we can figure the distance between home plate and second base as: 90^2 + 90^2 = x^2 8100 + 8100 = x^2 16200 = x^2 127.29 feet
180 feet While this is a technically true answer, it is only true if one measures the base runner's path. The distance from home to second, as a crow flies, is about 128'.