Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

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  • Bellsprout
    Hard Times.
    • Oct 2009
    • 25652

    #1

    Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball



    Last month, when A's pitcher Dallas Braden(notes) called out Alex Rodriguez(notes) for cutting across the Oakland Coliseum mound, the country was informed of a small slice of baseball's Code that had lain mostly dormant in recent memory.
    It was only one of a litany of unwritten rules that covers major leaguers' actions, designed essentially to preserve a baseline level of respect between competitors. They constitute the moral fabric of the game.
    The best known of these rules tells players not to steal a base when their team holds a big lead in the late innings of a game. Others include barring overt displays of exuberance in all but the most extreme circumstances; the hitter who watches his own home runs is the most egregious of violators in this category.
    Many fans have heard of these rules (Alex Rodriguez himself was unaware of one). Some sections of the Code, however, fly under the radar (even for baseball insiders, to judge by the number of people within the game who had never heard the rule about restraint from crossing the pitcher's mound).
    So, without further delay, here are 10 of baseball's more obscure unwritten rules:

    1. Don't swing at the first pitch after back-to-back home runs
    This is a matter of courtesy, respect for a pitcher who is clearly struggling, offering just a sliver of daylight with which to regain his senses. When Yankees rookie Chase Wright(notes) gave up back-to-back-to-back-to-back homers against Boston in 2007, the guys who hit numbers three and four — Mike Lowell(notes) and Jason Varitek(notes) — each watched a pitch before taking a cut.
    "Let him know, okay, I'm not swinging," said Hal McRae. "I know you're out there trying to do a job, and I have to do a job — but you've just given up back-to-back home runs. So I take the first pitch."

    2. Don't work the count when your team is up or down by a lot
    This is true for both pitchers and hitters. Nobody wants to see the fifth guy on a bullpen's depth chart nibbling on the corners in the late innings of a blowout. Similarly, hitters are expected to swing at anything close. It's an effort to quickly and efficiently end a lopsided contest.

    3. When hit by a pitch, don't rub the mark.
    This one is all about intimidation or lack thereof. It's a hitter's way of telling the pitcher that his best shot — intentional or otherwise —didn't hurt. Pete Rose made a point of sprinting to first base after being hit, to ensure that he stripped all satisfaction from the pitcher.
    "It's a macho thing, like a fighter who gets clocked in the mouth and shakes his head like it didn't hurt him," said Rich Donnelly. "But believe me, it hurts."
    Lou Brock was the only hitter Sandy Koufax ever threw at intentionally, and despite the fact that his shoulder was fractured by the pitch, forcing him from the game, never once did he rub the spot. The Washington Post once reported that Don Baylor "was hit by 267 pitches yet never rubbed, even once. Of course, several of the balls had to be hospitalized."

    4. Don't stand on the dirt cutout at home plate while a pitcher is
    warming up
    Just as Braden dismissed A-Rod's attempt to enter his sacred space, the area around the plate is meant only for the hitter, and then only when it's time for him to hit. Should a pitcher be getting loose before an at-bat, it's strictly off-limits. "I stay as far away from the cutout as I can when the pitcher is warming up," said Ken Griffey Jr.(notes) "If they could, they should put the on-deck circle in left field to make me happy. I don't want anything to do with messing with the pitcher when he's getting ready."

    5. Don't walk in front of a catcher or umpire when getting into batter's box
    This is respect, pure and simple. If the line from your dugout to the batter's box takes you between the pitcher and the catcher, walk around. Like the A-Rod incident, you'll likely never hear about this one until a player is called out for brazenly violating it.
    6. Don't help the opposition make a play (bracing them from falling into the dugout, etc.)
    In 1998, Dodgers left fielder Matt Luke braced Arizona's Andy Fox as the third baseman staggered into the Los Angeles dugout while chasing a pop fly. He knew the Code, but he had also been Fox's roommate in multiple levels of the Yankees' minor-league system, and was so tight with him that Fox had served as an usher in his wedding. Even then, he had his limits. "I waited until he made the play," said Luke in the Riverside Press Enterprise. "I wanted to prevent an injury. We're competing out there, and not for one second do I want to help the opposition."

    7. Relievers take it easy when facing other relievers
    The caveat to this piece of the Code is that for the most part, relievers don't step to the plate in close games, which gives their counterparts on the opposing team some leeway in their approach. "You'd probably give them all fastballs," said Dave LaRoche. "It was just a professional courtesy type of thing. Here it is — I'll give you a chance to hit it if you can."

    8. Follow the umpire's Code when addressing them on the field.
    This is a book in itself. How one talks to umpires goes a long way toward getting favorable calls, or at least not getting thrown out of a game. ("That call was horse----" is generally acceptable; "You're horse----" is never acceptable.) Some savvy teams go so far as to post headshots and bios in the clubhouse for the umps working that day's game, so that players can butter them up a bit.
    Still, there are ways to express anger without getting tossed. After umpire Shag Crawford called Dick Groat out on a play at second base, Groat told him, "You're still the second best umpire in the league." Then he added that the other 19 umpires were tied for first.

    9. Pitchers stay in the dugout at least until the end of the inning in which they get pulled
    This is purely about respect for one's teammates. "I know you're having a tough day, but give your teammates the respect to stay out here until the end of the inning," said Sean Casey(notes). "You don't want to show that you think the game's already lost."

    10. Pitchers never show up their fielders
    This doesn't happen frequently, but when it does, players notice. One pitcher who made a habit of excessive body language on the mound was Gaylord Perry, who would put his hands on his hips and stare down fielders who made errors behind him.
    "That bothered me because nobody glared at him if he gave up a home run or something like that," said Dave Nelson, Perry's teammate on the Rangers. "I always felt like I deserved the same respect because I'm out there busting my butt just like he is, and if I make an error, it wasn't because I was doing it on purpose."
    Perry's teammate in Cleveland, Oscar Gamble, had a different take: "If you don't do right, if you miss a ball you should have caught, you expect the fans to boo you," he said. "And this fan, Gaylord, was a player. That's the way I looked at it."
    Perry, however, was occasionally able to find his fielders innocent of wrongdoing. Once, after shortstop Todd Cruz fielded a grounder and air-mailed the ball into the stands, Perry withheld judgment. "Too much stuff on the ball," he said after the game.
    I found that pretty interesting. Some things I never thought of, like the don't cross in front of the ump/catcher rule.
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  • Blzer
    Resident film pundit
    • Mar 2004
    • 42520

    #2
    Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

    Originally posted by WeAreAllWitnesses
    Some things I never thought of, like the don't cross in front of the ump/catcher rule.
    This is one of those ones that I don't think of, but I do anyway. I don't do it because of the catcher and umpire, I do it because of the other batter's box. I hate my box being messed up, so I'm not going to mess up anyone else's either.

    #8 is iffy, because they're kind of implying that umpires change their habits or calls based on how someone addresses him or argues to him. As an umpire, I call everything far too objectively. I won't for a second consider who is doing what during a play and change my call, there's no reason to put salt in the wound and have spectators take notice as well. The best situation obviously is to stay out of that situation and make the right call each time so there are limited arguments. Never do makeup calls, either. If you messed up, admit to yourself that you messed up and move on. Never should anything a player does affect his ability to play the game, unless of course he is ejected.

    #1 is nonexistent. You have momentum on your side and if a pitcher hangs another pitch, the one thing that you want to do is go back-to-back-to-back. That's not lack of respect, that's trying to win a ballgame. What if you're losing in the game by a run and that's the one pitch you think you'll get? If I take a pitch, it's not out of respect. Likewise, if I swing at it, it's not out of disrespect. That rule doesn't make any sense. If he wants me to take a pitch, he should throw it out of the zone. Then he'll get his "respect".

    (I realized I'm jumping all over the place with numbers lol)

    #4 is totally true, and thankfully we never see it... but there is no reason that a batter should be anywhere near the cutout when a pitcher is warming up, either when he comes into the game or if it's a substitution. You have your business to do and take your hacks or time him, but don't stand over him.

    #7 is understandable, but I don't really see this fitting on a top ten list of unwritten rules. It's just kind of "there". Relievers don't bat very often anyway.
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    • Sportsforever
      NL MVP
      • Mar 2005
      • 20368

      #3
      Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

      Originally posted by WeAreAllWitnesses
      http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/blog/big...urn=mlb,238853



      I found that pretty interesting. Some things I never thought of, like the don't cross in front of the ump/catcher rule.
      Good stuff...I was taught all of these, but the one I never thought about was the relievers taking it easy on relievers. I am willing to bet most fans don't know this stuff.
      "People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring." - Rogers Hornsby

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      • Tomahawk
        MVP
        • Feb 2005
        • 1593

        #4
        Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

        I got an unwritten rule for fans!!!

        "If you gotta get out of your seat for any reason or you are returning to your seat wait until the end of the inning to do it. Don't come walking down the aisle blocking my view or climbing all over me and everyone else in the row while the game is going on. When the 3rd out is made or if there is a pitching change that is the time to get out of your seat or return to your seat."

        This happens more often in minor league games than it does in the major league games that I've gone to see. I was at a minor league game in Greensboro last summer and I told my wife that I was surprised no one had gotten killed by a foul ball there with the way people walk back and forth from their seat without paying attention to the game. About two weeks later I saw on the news that a man in Greensboro had lost an eye after being struck by a ball while walking to his seat.
        • LETS GO RED SOX!!!
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        • GO PACK GO!!!
        • LETS GO BRUINS!!!

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        • kehlis
          Moderator
          • Jul 2008
          • 27738

          #5
          Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

          #6 is the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Don't help other players as they fall into the dugout? I see that happen on a regular basis and never thought that there was a school of mind that said not to help them.


          Most of these unwritten rules are things I've never heard of.
          I have a couple things to add though:

          Any foul tip that hits off the umpire, the catcher goes out to talk to the pitcher, any time the catcher makes a block and has to use a body part none of us want to get hit in, the umpire dusts off the plate.

          In any blowout, whether you are the victim or the foe, never swing at a 3-0 pitch.

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          • Whitesox
            Closet pyromaniac
            • Mar 2009
            • 5287

            #6
            Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

            I still remember when Freddy Garcia violated #10 after Rob Mackowiak dropped a ball. Pissed me off, and I obviously wasn't the one being shown up.
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            • kehlis
              Moderator
              • Jul 2008
              • 27738

              #7
              Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

              Originally posted by Tomahawk
              I got an unwritten rule for fans!!!

              "If you gotta get out of your seat for any reason or you are returning to your seat wait until the end of the inning to do it. Don't come walking down the aisle blocking my view or climbing all over me and everyone else in the row while the game is going on. When the 3rd out is made or if there is a pitching change that is the time to get out of your seat or return to your seat."

              This happens more often in minor league games than it does in the major league games that I've gone to see. I was at a minor league game in Greensboro last summer and I told my wife that I was surprised no one had gotten killed by a foul ball there with the way people walk back and forth from their seat without paying attention to the game. About two weeks later I saw on the news that a man in Greensboro had lost an eye after being struck by a ball while walking to his seat.
              Disagree with this.

              The action in baseball isn't constant. No need to wait until the end of an inning to go back to your seat. There is enough down time in between pitches to be able to find your seat without disturbing the flow of the game...

              The scenario you are describing is really just idiocy, but if I go to the bathroom in between innings, I shouldn't have to wait until after the half inning to return to my seat...

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              • Whitesox
                Closet pyromaniac
                • Mar 2009
                • 5287

                #8
                Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                Originally posted by kehlis
                Disagree with this.

                The action in baseball isn't constant. No need to wait until the end of an inning to go back to your seat. There is enough down time in between pitches to be able to find your seat without disturbing the flow of the game...

                The scenario you are describing is really just idiocy, but if I go to the bathroom in between innings, I shouldn't have to wait until after the half inning to return to my seat...
                The only thing is, there is more than one person doing this. I remember one time I was at a Sox game, and it was hard to see because people were constantly getting up and sitting down.
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                • Speedy
                  #Ace
                  • Apr 2008
                  • 16143

                  #9
                  Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                  I don't agree with half of these.
                  Originally posted by Gibson88
                  Anyone who asked for an ETA is not being Master of their Domain.
                  It's hard though...especially when I got my neighbor playing their franchise across the street...maybe I will occupy myself with Glamore Magazine.

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                  • Speedy
                    #Ace
                    • Apr 2008
                    • 16143

                    #10
                    Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                    Originally posted by kehlis
                    Disagree with this.

                    The action in baseball isn't constant. No need to wait until the end of an inning to go back to your seat. There is enough down time in between pitches to be able to find your seat without disturbing the flow of the game...

                    The scenario you are describing is really just idiocy, but if I go to the bathroom in between innings, I shouldn't have to wait until after the half inning to return to my seat...
                    Not necessarily waiting until the end of the half-inning but at least until the AB is complete.
                    Originally posted by Gibson88
                    Anyone who asked for an ETA is not being Master of their Domain.
                    It's hard though...especially when I got my neighbor playing their franchise across the street...maybe I will occupy myself with Glamore Magazine.

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                    • Jgainsey
                      I can't feel it
                      • Mar 2007
                      • 3362

                      #11
                      Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                      Originally posted by Speedy
                      Not necessarily waiting until the end of the half-inning but at least until the AB is complete.
                      Yeah, that's really all I expect of other fans. There's usually enough time to get out of your seat, and out of the aisle, before the next at-bat. If you leave in the middle of an AB, you might not block anyone in your row before the next pitch is thrown, but you're going to block people the entire time you walking up the aisle.

                      There's so much down time in baseball, that there is really no excuse for moving around during an at-bat. Just because you(I'm not directing this at anyone in this thread, btw) don't think that there's much going on at a given point in a baseball game, doesn't mean that there aren't several other people who are really into every play/at-bat, or maybe even trying to keep score.
                      Now, more than ever

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                      • pietasterp
                        All Star
                        • Feb 2004
                        • 6244

                        #12
                        Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                        Too many "unwritten rules" in baseball...

                        But I agree you should wait until the end of an AB or clear break in the action to get up/sit down. It's just basic courtesy, no one should have to ever teach you this.

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                        • WazzuRC
                          Go Cougs!
                          • Dec 2002
                          • 5617

                          #13
                          Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                          #2 is ridiculous.

                          I'm not about to start swinging at pitches outside the zone if I'm in a groove just because our team is up late in the agme and the pitcher can't find the strike zone.

                          I've heard of all of these except for #2 and #7.

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                          • Sportsforever
                            NL MVP
                            • Mar 2005
                            • 20368

                            #14
                            Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                            Originally posted by WazzuRC
                            #2 is ridiculous.

                            I'm not about to start swinging at pitches outside the zone if I'm in a groove just because our team is up late in the agme and the pitcher can't find the strike zone.

                            I've heard of all of these except for #2 and #7.
                            It's not so much about swinging at pitches bouncing in the dirt or pitches 3 feet outside, but if it's close you should be hacking. Again, most of the rules aren't things that someone sites down and tells you all at once, but they are learned as you play the game.

                            I learned this one when I was batting in a lopsided game...I watched a pitch that I thought was outside go by and the ump called it a strike. I looked back at him in disbelief and he said, "Son, it's a 12 run ballgame...you better be swinging if you can reach it." Unwritten rule noted.
                            "People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring." - Rogers Hornsby

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                            • Blzer
                              Resident film pundit
                              • Mar 2004
                              • 42520

                              #15
                              Re: Ten Unwritten Rules Of Baseball

                              Originally posted by Sportsforever
                              I learned this one when I was batting in a lopsided game...I watched a pitch that I thought was outside go by and the ump called it a strike. I looked back at him in disbelief and he said, "Son, it's a 12 run ballgame...you better be swinging if you can reach it." Unwritten rule noted.
                              Stupid logic on the umpire's end. That's not unwritten (not that it's written either), but people behind the plate calling the game get restless. It's their job to stay back there, and an inch off the plate is a ball from the beginning of the game to the end of the game. It invigorates me that I have to be placed in the same category as these lazy baseball officials.

                              What I can't seem to figure out is, of all the times to give the pitcher a wide strike, why on a 3-0 count? He didn't earn it, hasn't for three pitches. And now you discredit the batter's ability to have an eye at the plate for four pitches and you bring him back into the box on a wide one. Makes no sense.
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