Triple play

This article is about the baseball term. For other uses, see Triple play (disambiguation).

In baseball, a triple play (denoted as TP in baseball statistics) is the rare act of making three outs during the same continuous play.

Triple plays happen infrequently – there have been 709 triple plays in Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1876 through the end of the 2016 regular season,[1] an average of approximately 5 per season – because they depend on a combination of two elements, which are themselves uncommon.

Examples

The most likely scenario for a triple play is no outs with runners on first base and second base, which has been the case for the majority of MLB triple plays.[1] In that context, two example triple plays are:

Most recent MLB triple play

The most recent triple play in MLB was recorded on September 23, 2016 by the Milwaukee Brewers against the Cincinnati Reds, who lined out into a 3-3-6 triple play, similar to the above 4-6-3 example. In the top of the 1st inning, with runners on first and second, Reds' batter Joey Votto lined out to Brewers' first baseman Chris Carter (first out), Carter then stepped on first base before runner Scott Schebler could tag up (second out), and Carter then threw to shortstop Orlando Arcia who stepped on second base before runner José Peraza could tag up (third out).[9][10]

Unassisted triple plays

The rarest type of triple play, and one of the rarest events of any kind in baseball, is for a single fielder to complete all three outs. There have only been 15 unassisted triple plays in MLB history,[11] making this feat rarer than a perfect game.[12]

Typically, an unassisted triple play is achieved when a middle infielder catches a line drive near second base (first out), steps on the base before the runner who started there can tag up (second out), and then tags the runner advancing from first before he can return there (third out). Of the 15 unassisted triple plays in MLB history, 12 have been completed in this manner by a middle infielder.

Most recent MLB unassisted triple play

The most recent MLB unassisted triple play is consistent with the above – it occurred on August 23, 2009, by second baseman Eric Bruntlett of the Philadelphia Phillies, in a game against the New York Mets. In the bottom of the ninth inning with men on first and second, Jeff Francoeur hit a line drive very close to second base, which Bruntlett was covering in response to the baserunners running. Bruntlett caught the ball (first out), stepped on second before Luis Castillo could tag up (second out), and then tagged Daniel Murphy who was approaching from first (third out).[13][14] This was only the second game-ending unassisted triple play in MLB history, the first one having occurred in 1927.[15]

Unfielded triple play

Political columnist and baseball enthusiast George Will posed one hypothetical way that a triple play could occur with no fielder touching the ball.[16] With runners on first and second and no outs, the batter hits an infield fly, and is automatically out: one out. The runner from first passes the runner from second and is called out for that infraction: two outs. Just after that, the falling ball hits the runner from second, who is called out for interference: three outs.

Whenever a batter or runner is out without a fielder touching the ball, MLB rule book section 10.09 provides for automatic putouts to be assigned by the official scorer. In this case, the first out would be credited to whoever the official scorer believes would have had the best chance of catching the infield fly. The second and third outs would be credited to the fielder(s) closest to the points the runners were, when their respective outs occurred. Under the scenario described above, the same fielder (the shortstop, for example) could be credited with all three putouts, thus attaining an unassisted triple play without having touched the ball.

Odd and notable triple plays

Historical totals

Baserunners

Position of baserunners when the triple play started.

Men on base Occurrences[1] Percentage
1 2 - 475 67.00
1 2 3 124 17.49
1 - 3 69 9.73
- 2 3 36 5.08
unknown 5 0.71
Total 709 100

Outs

Asterisks (*) denote which players recorded outs, per standard baseball positions.
Combinations that have occurred at least 10 times are listed.

Fielders Occurrences[1] Percentage
5*-4*-3* 87 12.27
6*-4*-3* 56 7.90
4*-6*-3* 44 6.21
3*-3*-6* 39 5.50
6*-6*-3* 27 3.81
4*-3*-6* 18 2.54
4*-4*-3* 18 2.54
1*-6*-3* 16 2.26
6-4*-3*-2* 14 1.97
5-4*-3*-2* 10 1.41
5*-5*-3* 10 1.41
Total 339 47.81

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "SABR Triple Plays database". SABR. Retrieved 22 Oct 2016.
  2. 1 2 Dolinar, Sean (9 Aug 2014). "MLB — Bases Loaded. No Outs. No Runs.". stats.seandolinar.com. Retrieved 28 Oct 2016.
  3. "Oakland Athletics at Baltimore Orioles Play by Play and Boxscore". Baseball Reference. 7 Jul 1973. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  4. "Baltimore Orioles at Detroit Tigers Play by Play and Boxscore". Baseball Reference. 20 Jul 1973. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  5. "SABR Triple Plays: Trivia nuggets". SABR. Retrieved 22 Oct 2016.
  6. "Boston Red Sox 1, Minnesota Twins 0". Retrosheet. 17 Jul 1990.
  7. "Brooks Robinson Quotes". Baseball Almanac.
  8. Ahrens, Mark (29 Jul 2010). "Brooks Robinson — Master of the Triple Play". Books on Baseball. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  9. "Cincinnati Reds at Milwaukee Brewers Play by Play and Boxscore". Baseball Reference. 23 Sep 2016. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  10. "Chris Carter begins an impressive triple play against the Reds". YouTube. 23 Sep 2016. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  11. Ginsburg, Steve (August 23, 2009). "Bruntlett turns game-ending unassisted triple play". Reuters. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  12. DiComo, Anthony (December 30, 2009). "Mets bear the Brunt of unassisted triple play". MLB.com. Retrieved August 16, 2012.
  13. "Bruntlett's triple play". YouTube. 19 Apr 2013. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  14. "Philadelphia Phillies at New York Mets Play by Play and Boxscore". Baseball Reference. 23 Aug 2009. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  15. Zolecki, Todd (23 Aug 2009). "Bruntlett joins rare company". MLB.com.
  16. Will, George (28 Mar 2009). "Spring Brain Training". Newsweek.
  17. "Pirates turn second triple play in two seasons". ESPN. 10 May 2015.
  18. "Pirates turn an spectacular 4-5-4 triple play". YouTube. 9 May 2015. Retrieved 21 Oct 2016.
  19. Collier, Jamal (30 Jul 2016). "Nats slay Giant threat with historic triple play". MLB.com.
  20. "New York Yankees 6, Minnesota Twins 4". Retrosheet. 29 May 1982.
  21. Nash, Bruce; Zullo, Allan. The Baseball Hall of Shame 4. Pocket Books. pp. s 35–36. ISBN 0-671-74609-X.
  22. "NYY@MIN: Twins turn triple play". YouTube. 5 Nov 2013. Retrieved 22 Oct 2016.
  23. Casella, Paul (12 Apr 2013). "Like no other: Yanks' triple play first of its kind". MLB.com.
  24. "White Sox turn first 9-3-2-6-2-5 triple play in major league history". ESPN. 23 Apr 2016.
  25. "Rangers at White Sox - Triple Play". YouTube. 22 Apr 2016. Retrieved 22 Oct 2016.

External links

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