I remember reading about a baseball incident in the Minor Leagues many years ago. The field already wasn’t in the greatest shape, and it had been raining hard before the game. A batter hit a ball into a mud puddle right in front of home plate and, because no-one could find the ball, it turned into an inside-the-park home run!
Mediatech almost 3 years ago
Isn’t it technically “out of the park” if it goes underground?
Imagine almost 3 years ago
Is that ground safe to stand on?
danketaz Premium Member almost 3 years ago
Holey Moley!
Troglodyte almost 3 years ago
Law of cartoon physics: “What goes down, must come up”! :D
ddjg almost 3 years ago
Uh, friction? . . . nem’ min’.
ChessPirate almost 3 years ago
I remember reading about a baseball incident in the Minor Leagues many years ago. The field already wasn’t in the greatest shape, and it had been raining hard before the game. A batter hit a ball into a mud puddle right in front of home plate and, because no-one could find the ball, it turned into an inside-the-park home run!
Zebrastripes almost 3 years ago
I thought they were called a ground ball…
Lynnjav almost 3 years ago
Calvin ball!
mistercatworks almost 3 years ago
It works with light waves, so why not?
joannesshadow almost 3 years ago
Can you picture Earl Weaver arguing that call?
The Fly Hunter almost 3 years ago
Prehistoric cornhole?