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| CATEGORIES ABOUT INTENTIONAL BASE ON BALLS | |
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When a Batter receives an intentional base on balls, he is entitled to walk to first base. Receiving an intentional base on balls does not count as an official At Bat for a batter but does count as a Plate Appearance , and a Base On Balls . When pitching an intentional base on balls, the pitcher will generally throw to an area several feet outside the plate, where it would be physically impossible for the batter to hit the ball. A ball that is thrown intentionally for the purpose of giving up an intentional base on balls is called an intentional ball. A base on balls counts as an intentional base on balls if and only if the final pitch thrown in the at bat is an intentional ball, even if not all the pitches are intentional balls. The purpose of an intentional walk is to bypass a good hitter in order to face a batter that the defensive team feels they have a better chance at getting out, or to set up a Double Play ball by putting a runner on first base. The danger of issuing an intentional walk is that an extra batter is now on base for the following hitter. In many cases, there is an additional danger that the batter who the opposing team chooses to face will feel slighted and work harder to get a hit. In the history of major league baseball, four players have been issued intentional walks with the bases loaded (thus giving the batting team an automatic run). This is only done in the rarest of cases, typically when the pitching team is leading by four runs or less late in the game and a particularly feared hitter is at the plate. The four players given such passes are Nap Lajoie (1901), Mel Ott (1929), Bill Nicholson (1944), and Barry Bonds (1998). Bonds holds almost every Major League Baseball record in existence for intentional walks with four in a nine-inning game ( 2004 ), 120 in a season (2004) and 604 in his career (more than the next two players on the all-time list, Hank Aaron and Willie McCovey , combined). Bonds, a prolific Home Run hitter, was a common target for the intentional walk. Nevertheless, many times the decision to walk Bonds came back to bite opposing managers, as the San Francisco Giants still had the National League 's second-best offense in 2004, scoring 820 runs. In the first month of the 2004 baseball season, Bonds drew 43 walks, 22 of them intentional. He broke his previous record of 68 intentional walks, set in 2002 , on July 10 , 2004 in his last appearance before the All-Star break. |
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