Baseball, by the Rules

Intro

Play Ball!

Introduction

Play Ball!

There aren't a whole of of these on file, but if you want to see them, click here.

Inside the Park Home Run

Most of the time, when a batter gets a home run, it’s because they hit the ball out of the park. But! Occasionally, a batter will get a home run without the ball going over the wall. Welcome to the inside-the-park home run.

Inside-the-park home runs are usually the result of a defensive misplay that won’t be scored an error. For example: an outfielder dives to make a catch, and misses— or worse, an outfielder completely loses track of the ball. Alternatively, if a ball caroms off the outfield wall in just the right way, and the batter is fast enough, it can go for an inside-the-parker. The combination of things that have to go right/wrong for an inside-the-park home run is pretty rare, so there aren’t very many of them, even over the course of an entire season of MLB play.

Aside from the whole “ball doesn’t go over the fence” business, an inside-the-park home run is just like its more cinematically bombastic counterpart: the runner scores, but they still have to touch the bases, in order. If they don't, the defense can make what’s called an “appeal” to the umpire who is in charge of the base. Specifically, before the next pitch is thrown, the pitcher steps off the rubber, and throws the ball to the base in question, where a fielder will catch the ball and tag the base. If the umpire agrees that the runner never touched the base, that runner will be called out, and their run does not count— and if they were the third out of the inning, that inning is over. This type of thing is exceptionally rare, but it does still happen occasionally. The rise of replay means that teams may jump directly to a replay challenge instead of making the appeal, first.

Copyright 2026, Tony Forbes

Disclaimer

Acknowledgements

© 2026, Tony Forbes

Disclaimer

Acknowledgements