
Baseball is a sport played between two teams usually of nine
players each. It is a bat-and-ball game in which a pitcher throws (pitches) a
hard, fist-sized, leather-covered ball toward a batter on the opposing team.
The batter attempts to hit the baseball with a tapered cylindrical bat, made of
wood (as required in professional baseball) or a variety of other materials (as
allowed in many nonprofessional games). A team scores runs only when batting, by
advancing its players--primarily via hits, walks, and the opposition team's
fielding errors--counterclockwise past a series of three markers called bases
and touching home plate arranged at the corners of a ninety-foot square, or
"diamond." The game, played without time restriction, is structured
around nine segments called innings. In each inning, both teams are given the
opportunity to bat and score runs; a team's half-inning ends when three outs
are recorded against that team.