Rarest plays in baseball (MLB only)

Gene Michael, the former shortstop and manager of the Yankees, did it 5 times in his MLB career.

It’s happened in the majors, too.

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/2028054-d-backs-gerardo-parra-throws-out-dan-haren-at-first-base-from-right-field

Oddly enough, it’s happened “a lot.” Here’s a Baseball Reference blog post that has a couple in the post and more in the comments.

Although, maybe it’s only happened about 15 times or so, which makes it as rare as the unassisted triple play. But it seems like there have been “a lot” of instances.

I’m guessing that a balk can be brought on by nerves, and what makes a pitcher more nervous than bases loaded in the 9th (or 13th!) with a tie score?

Wasn’t there an attempt to cite him for animal cruelty?

That was the Dave Winfield bird murder up in Toronto.

The infamous ball stuck in the Metrodome’s roof.

Balls hit the catwalks in Tropicana Field in Tampa all the time. It’s not that unusual, even if it didn’t happen at the Metrodome often.

Apparently only two ever got stuck up there, though.

Don’t balls get stuck in the outfield ivy at Wrigley Field fairly often?

From Wiki.

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I feel like I’ve seen that a few times (guys like Vladimir Guerrero or Larry Walker come to mind). I tried to see if I could find a comprehensive list of 9-3 putouts—I failed at that task, but I did find that there was a 9-3 putout that preserved a perfect game (although, as astorian had said above, that may be partly attributed to outfielders playing more shallow in 1879 than they would in the modern era).

I’ve seen two of MLB’s 15 unassisted triple plays live (but on TV): Mickey Morandini’s and Eric Bruntlett’s. Bruntlett’s UTP, I believe, was the only one to ever end a game—the winning run was at the plate, too.

There was one back in, the 1920’s,I think. Long time ago at any rate.

Wiki says 1927 by Johnny Nuen.

I very rarely post, but I did and I immediately said something ignorant. :smack:

This thread prompted me to stumble across this article of strange endings to World Series games. I don’t know if it would fit the OP’s qualifications of a “play,” but there have been 15 World Series games that have ended on walk-off homers, but only one of those were hit by a player who did not have a home run in the regular season (Scott Podsednik in 2005 for the White Sox).

(But what I found particularly interesting about the linked article was that Babe Ruth ended the 1926 Series—in Game 7!—by being thrown out at second trying to steal. Is this common knowledge? I’m trying to wrap my brain about how I’d react if a guy like Ryan Howard—or Albert Pujols, if I were an Angels fan—went rogue and did that. I don’t think I’d be able to recover.)

Pitcher Tony Cloninger of the Braves had two grand slams and 9 RBIs in one game, vs. the Giants, in 1966.

I saw a play, I forget where, but it was in a park where the stands get pretty close to the foul line. A fly ball hit the right fielder, then bounced into the stands in foul territory. It was a fair ball, because it hit the fielder in fair territory. A fair ball that goes out of play without hitting the ground is a home run, so that was a home run even though it didn’t have home run distance.

That would have been a ground rule double if it wasn’t beyond the foul pole. But there are places like the right field at Fenway where something like that could happen right beyond the Pesky Pole, but that’s home run distance.

There was another one a few hours ago – Jose Bautista was playing slightly back, if anything, but Billy Butler hit it hard to right and isn’t the fastest guy on the planet.

Ray Chapman is the only player (thus far) to die from a baseball injury. He was struck in the head while batting.

John McSherry was a baseball umpire who suffered a heart attack during a game in Cincinnati. On opening day. He was pronounced dead at the hospital.

A game against the Chicago Cubs was cancelled when one of the other team’s players, Darryl Kile, was found dead in his hotel room.

WRONG! That’s what a lot of people thought. But as soon as it touched the fielder, it was a fair ball, and it went out of play without touching anything else, so it was a home run.

*7.05.f from MLB official rules

(f) Two bases, if a fair ball bounces or is deflected into the stands outside the first or third base foul lines: … (the rule continues with other types of ground rule doubles)*
Wouldn’t this be the right rule to apply for the bounce off fielder into the stands short of the foul pole scenario here?