Not yet an old trivia sports question, but it might as well get posted here.
Who is the only Major League Baseball player to play both teams in a single game.
(Hint: Also, playing in the same inning.)
Blue Jays-turned-Red Sox catcher Danny Jansen, played for Toronto on June 26, then rain was called before he could finish batting. A month later he was traded to Boston, and when the game resumed August 26, he was put in as the Red Sox catcher to the guy pinch-hitting for him, then played the bottom of the inning.
And not only did he play for both teams and was the original batter and ending catcher on the same at-bat, he was a father-of-1 when he started the at-bat, and a father-of-2 when it ended.
They obviously weren’t thinking of this exact scenario but there have been infrequent but not unheard of instances where someone could not complete their at bat. Once you realize that happens the question of who’s at bat it is comes up next.
Batter swings at strike two and pulls an oblique and has to be taken out of the game. Batter takes a called strike one and gets thrown out of the game for arguing with the ump. Both scenarios that could happen at any time.
I wasn’t worried about this particular instance, just that there are detailed scoring rules related to who is credited with an at-bat based on the number of strikes recorded before a pinch hitter is substituted. It has no impact on the outcome of play, so I would have thought a simple rule (whoever finishes the at-bat gets awarded the outcome of the play) would suffice. But the gods of baseball like their minutia.
That is true in all cases except a strike out. The original batter is charged with the strike out if he leaves the game with 2 strikes against him. The rules for a change of the pitcher are a bit more complicated. For a walk, the original pitcher is charged if the count is 3 balls and any number of strikes or 2-0 or 2-1. The original pitcher is credited with the strike out. If you want to know about strikeouts when the pitcher is changed, read Rule 9.16 (h) 2 and 9.16 (h)3 which seem to contradict each other.
The first perfect game he was apart of came during his first full year before he was a star. That game is also the answer to the question “What is the only perfect game pitched on artificial turf?”
What professional sports franchise - in all the world, in all sports - has, to date, sold the most tickets? Throughout history?
The Dodgers, who since their founding in Brooklyn in 1883 through today have reported attendance of 233,933,793. The Yankees are second, but way, way behind.