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  1. The wall has numbers affixed or painted on it that denote the distance from that point on the wall to home plate. In most modern major league ballparks, the wall is made of some hard material (e.g., concrete, plywood, sheet metal) with padding on the field side to protect players who may collide with the wall at high speed while trying to make ...

  2. Sep 13, 2011 · Major league ballparks are not standardized in size mainly for historical or local reasons, and remain non-standardized for practical and historical reasons. It isn't that there are no rules...

  3. For reason 1: a ball hit into the air and caught in this foul territory counts as an out, so it's construction makes a difference in how a team is positioned and how batters approach their at-bats. On fields with a lage amount of foul territory, more pop-ups will be caught for outs.

  4. The unusual playing surface, along with the presence of catwalks and lights above the field — the cause of many lost fly balls — were major downsides for indoor parks, and may be why most have been replaced with other types of ballparks.

  5. The diamond shape of the baseball field has its roots in the early days of the game fields. At first, it was often marked out in rectangular or triangular shapes. But then, they discovered that the diamond shape maximizes playing space and accommodates different positions for the players.

  6. The distance of the outfield walls is very significant for any team, particularly a home team. If the walls are close, then home run hitting is much easier whereas long walls make it more difficult (and a team is more likely to be built on "single hitters" and "speed") to steal bases and so forth.

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  8. Since baseball fields in general are in the shape of one fourth of a circle, we can divide the area of a full circle by four. Therefore, if we know the radius from the home to the outfield wall, we can plug the radius into the formula… A = ½πr². and get the area of a baseball field.

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