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'.
Mlb (bases) are (90 ft.) apart. From the (pitching) rubber to home plate is (60 ft. 6 in.) and there is no set distance from the plate to the out field wall
The baseball playing field (or diamond) is shaped like a diamond. There are three bases (first, second, and third) are on the corners away from home plate. The distance between these bases (on the basepath or distance straight from first base to second base, or second base to third base, etc.) is 90 feet in Major League baseball. In Little League, the distance in 60 feet.
35 feet from the rubber to the back of home plate.
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.
360 feet
Since various leagues have different size baseball diamonds, you can use the following formula: What is the distance between first base and second base? For example, 60 ft. Square that number (multiply it by itself). For example, 60 x 60 = 3600. Double that answer. For example, 3600 x 2 = 7200. Find the square root of that answer (most calculators have the square root function). The answer will be the distance between home and second, also the distance between first and third. For example, 84.85 feet, or 84 feet 10 inches.
Three. First, second and third, then home plate.
113.13
127.28 ft ... 90' between bases, 127.28'= hypotenuse of the triangle made by home, 1st & 2nd
The length of a standard baseball field is approximately 90-95 meters (300-330 feet) from home plate to the outfield fence.
For a standard softball field, with 60 ft. bases, the distance from the apex (point) of home plate to the middle of 2nd base is 84 feet, 10-1/4 inches.