Baseball, by the Rules

Intro

Play Ball!

Introduction

Play Ball!

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A Triple into the Outfield

A batter advancing to third base on a base hit, no matter where the ball is hit, and provided there’s no error on the play, is called a "triple". Triples are sometimes referred to as “doubles with speed,” though with a ground ball triple, you’re looking at “speed + luck,” as the ball has to get hit to just the right spot— as you'll see from the examples, this specifically means down the first- or third-base line, where the ball rattles around in the corners a bit, making it difficult to retrieve cleanly. If the outfielder isn’t 100% efficient, and the batter/runner is fast, that batter/runner can easily get a triple.

This is where we would usually go onto say that a runner who is really feeling themselves, as they near third base, could say to themselves “why not try for the whole dang thing?” and head for home. This is technically possible, but a search of MLB’s video room shows exactly one instance of this happening on a ground ball1, so we are going to just go ahead and cut things off before they get too ridiculous.

After dusting themselves off, the batter/runner takes third, and the inning continues.

Copyright 2026, Tony Forbes

Disclaimer

Acknowledgements

© 2026, Tony Forbes

Disclaimer

Acknowledgements