Baseball

Part of a series of articles on
Sports
Summer Sports
Track and field athletics

Football (soccer)
Basketball
Bowls
Rugby
Gymnastics
Baseball
American football
Cycling·Auto racing
Cricket·Golf
Field hockey·Handball
Archery·Shooting
Fencing·Weightlifting
Pentathlon·Triathlon
Horseback riding

Water sports

Swimming· Diving
Water polo·Sailing
Canoeing·Rowing

Martial arts

Boxing·Wrestling
Karate·Taekwondo

Net sports

Tennis· Volleyball
Table tennis· Badminton

Winter sports

Ice hockey· Skating

Skiing·Curling
Bobsled·Luge
Snowboarding·Biathlon
Ice sledge hockey

Baseball is a bat-and-ball sport played on a field by two teams against each other. In baseball, a player on one team throws a small round ball at a player on the other team, who tries to hit it with a bat. Then the player who hits the ball has to run around the field. Players get runs by running around in a full circle around three points on the ground called bases, to back where they started, which is called home plate. They have to do this without getting caught by the players on the other team.

Baseball started in the United States in the 1700s and 1800s. Many people in North America, South America, and East Asia play baseball, but the sport is most known in the United States and Japan. In the U.S., baseball is called the national pastime,[1] because so many people in the United States used to spend a lot of time playing or watching baseball games. Today, though, most Americans follow football more than baseball, especially when it comes time for the Super Bowl.[1]

  1. 1.0 1.1 "The National Pastime in the 1920s: The Rise of the Baseball Fan". historymatters.gmu.edu.

Developed by StudentB