Wall climb
A wall climb is a play in baseball where a fielder makes an out by catching a fly ball or pop up while climbing a wall.
The play is generally made by outfielders robbing hitters of hits that otherwise would have been home runs, or at the very least a double. A wall climb can also be made by climbing the wall in foul territory to make an out. Under Major League Baseball (MLB) rules, the catch is ruled an out when the fielder making the out has at least one foot over legal playing territory during the catch and no feet touching the ground of an out of play area, regardless of whether his body ultimately lands in the field of play or out of play.[1][2]
One MLB player with a reputation for wall climbing was outfielder Torii Hunter, who won nine Gold Gloves in his 19-year major league career. One notable wall climb by Hunter occurred in the first inning of the 2002 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, when he robbed Barry Bonds of a home run in right-center field.[3]
The wall climb move is also simulated in baseball video games such as the MLB 2K series.[4]
See also
- Steve Bartman incident
References
External links
- Wall climbs at YouTube
- v
- t
- e
- Rules of baseball
- Ejections
- Ground rules
- Infield fly rule
- In flight
- Interference
- Pitch clock
- Protested game
- Strike zone
- Suspended game
- Unwritten rules
- Cheating
- Comparison of baseball and softball
- Ball
- Bat
- Batting cage
- Batting glove
- Batting helmet
- Cap
- Doughnut
- Glove (defense)
- Pitching machine
- Protective cup
- Shin guard
- Stirrups
- Uniform
- Uniform number
- Batting order
- Innings
- Out
- Positions
- Run
- Pace of play
- At bat
- Baltimore chop
- Bat flip
- Batted ball
- Batting count
- Batting out of order
- Bunt
- sacrifice bunt
- slap bunt
- squeeze play
- Charging the mound
- Checked swing
- Cleanup hitter
- Designated hitter
- Double
- Double switch
- Foul ball
- Foul tip
- Golden sombrero
- Ground rule double
- Hat trick
- Hit
- Hit and run
- Hit by pitch
- Hitting for the cycle
- Home run
- Grand slam
- Inside-the-park
- Walk-off
- Moonshot
- Chinese
- Infield hit
- Leadoff hitter
- Lefty-righty switch
- Line drive
- Mendoza Line
- On-deck
- Plate appearance
- Platoon system
- Pull hitter
- Sacrifice fly
- Single
- Strikeout
- Strike zone
- Sweet spot
- Switch hitter
- Triple
- Walk
(softball)
- Balk
- Beanball
- Breaking ball
- Brushback pitch
- Changeup
- Curveball
- Eephus
- Emery ball
- Fastball
- two-seam
- four-seam
- cutter
- sinker
- split-finger
- Full count
- Immaculate inning
- Inside pitching
- Intentional balk
- Intentional walk
- Knuckleball
- Maddux
- No-hitter
- Perfect game
- Pickoff
- Pitch count
- Pitching position
- Pitchout
- Quick pitch
- Screwball
- Shutout
- Slider
- Spitball
- Strikeout
- Strike zone
- Striking out the side
- Time of pitch
- Wild pitch
- Balk
- Bases loaded
- Caught stealing
- Hit and run
- Lead off
- Left on base
- Obstruction
- Rundown
- Safe
- Scoring position
- Slide
- Small ball
- Squeeze play
- Stolen base
- Tag up
- Tie goes to the runner
(positioning)
- Appeal play
- Assist
- Blocking the plate
- Catch
- Caught stealing
- Covering a base
- Defensive indifference
- Double play
- Error
- Fielder's choice
- Fifth infielder
- Force play
- Fourth out
- Hidden ball trick
- In-between hop
- Infield fly rule
- Infield shift
- Interference
- Neighborhood play
- Passed ball
- Pickoff
- Putout
- Rundown
- Tag out
- Triple play
- Uncaught third strike
- Wall climb
- Wheel play
- Baseball card
- Baseball statistics
- Bench jockey
- Bench-clearing brawl
- Dead ball
- Doubleheader
- Jargon
- Injured list
- List of baseball films
- Pepper
- Scorekeeping
- Series
- Seventh-inning stretch
- Shagging
- Sign stealing
- Slump
- Streak
- Variations of baseball
- Category
- Portal
- WikiProject