In baseball, there are three outs in an inning. When the third out is recorded, the inning is over, notwithstanding the home team scoring a winning run in the ninth or beyond. That doesn't matter; there is no such thing as a fourth out in an inning, except when it almost happened.
OK, I can't say it "almost" happened, as much as my being reminded of the fact that it actually could, and the situation for it came up on Wednesday night. The announcers, Jerry Remy and Dave O'Brien, did not point out that it was a possibility, but I saw it immediately.
The Kansas City Royals, a challenged club this year, was at Fenway Park to play Boston. In the first inning, Whit Merrifield of the Royals walked, and went to third on a double by Jorge Soler. That left men on second and third, with one out following a strikeout.
Second and third, one out. Plot material.
Salvador Perez was the next batter, and he hit a fly to the outfield, quite deep but playable, an easy sacrifice fly but deep enough to where Soler could have tagged up on second and gone to third, had he actually remembered that there was only one out. Fortunately for me and the column, he did not.
Merrifield tagged up and scored, followed closely by Soler, who had not bothered to tag up and was being screamed at in vain by the third-base coach. Of course, the outfielders relayed the ball back to second, and Soler, nowhere near second and unsure what was going on, was doubled off second for the third out. Since Merrifield had clearly touched home before the ball got to second, the run counted.
The broadcast went off to commercial, and I was scratching my head.
What, I thought, if Merrifield had left third base too early? The play had already happened, but it was worth a look, since if the Red Sox had appealed at third, and Merrifield had been called out, the KC run would have been taken off the scoreboard.
Now, Merrifield had obviously not left too early, but what if he had? The first out of the inning was a strikeout, the second the catch of the long fly, and the third was Soler being doubled off second to end the inning. There would already have been three outs before an appeal play at third, but given that a run would be taken off the scoreboard, it would not have been moot; Boston would have to have made the appeal to get the run removed, and would have.
Merrifield would have been called out -- in order to get the run off the board, there would have to have been a different outcome for Merrifield and that would have been his being called out -- the fourth out of the inning.
I don't exactly have the Rules of Baseball memorized, but I'm guessing that situation would actually result in an inning of four outs, perfectly in keeping with the rules.
Remy and O'Brien didn't bring that up, but I hope at least this column will trigger some fun discussion of a four-out inning.
Copyright 2018 by Robert Sutton
My guess is if Merrifield had left early, his out would be considered the third out of the inning since it took place before Soler was doubled off. At least that's how I think it would be officially scored, the decisions by official scorers leaving me scratching my head sometimes.
When a batter reaches base because of a passed ball on a strikeout, he is still scored with a K, which is an out, even though he is on base. So the out doesn't count for the inning, but it does count for the batter's hitting record and the pitcher's strikeout record. Such a simple game can be awfully confusing at times.
I actually knew this before I wrote it, but there would actually be three credited outs in the inning, and only the assists and putouts would stay in the book (Rule 7.10). The pitcher would only be credited with a three-out inning, and Merrifield but not Soler would be called out. Some day it will happen.