SOFTBALL GAME
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Adamson University batting during a game in women's play.
(Photo courtesy of ASAPHIL)
The seven-day Cebuana Lhuillier National Softball
Open championships hosted by Baguio City
concluded with the victories of Rizal Technological
University (RTU) in the mens division and University
of Santo Tomas (UST) in the womens division.
RTU Blue Thunders win against Cavite Province-Philippine
Navy All Stars, 4-2, was their seventh straight, while
protecting their unbeaten records the past two years
when they triumphed in the recent State Colleges
and Universities Athletic Association, Commission
on Higher Education meets and the Softball Pilipinas
first semi-pro tilt, all this year, the 2009 Association
of Southeast Asian Nations championship in Brunei,
and the Philippine Olympic Festival.
The name softball was given to the game in 1926. A
tournament held in 1933 at the Chicago World's Fair
spurred interest in the game. The Amateur Softball Association
of America (founded 1933) governs the game in the United
States and sponsors annual sectional and World Series
championships. The World Baseball Softball Confederation
(WBSC) regulates rules of play in more than 110 countries
, including the United States and Canada; before the WBSC
was formed in 2013, the International Softball Federation
filled this role. Women's fast-pitch softball became a
Summer Olympic sport in 1996, but it (and baseball)
were dropped in 2005 from the 2012 games.
There are two types of softball. In the most common type,
slow-pitch softball, the ball, sometimes larger than the
standard 12 inches, must arch on its path to the batter;
there are 10 players in a team; and bunting and stealing
are prohibited. In fastpitch softball, the pitch is fast, there
are 9 players on the field at one time, and bunting and
stealing are permitted. Softball rules vary some
what from those of baseball. Two major differences
are that the ball must be pitched underhand—from
46 ft. (14 m) for men or 43 ft. (12 m)[1] for women
as compared with 60.5 ft. (18.4 m) in baseball—and
that seven innings instead of nine constitute a regulation game.[2]
Sixteen-inch softball, also sometimes referred to as
"mushball" or "super-slow pitch", is a direct descendant
of Hancock's original game. Defensive players are not
allowed to wear fielding gloves. Sixteen-inch
softball is played extensively
in Chicago,[9] where devotees such as the late
Mike Royko consider it the "real" game,[10] and New
Orleans. In New Orleans, sixteen-inch softball is called
"Cabbage Ball" and is a popular team sport in area
elementary and high schools.
Softball is played between two teams on a large field,
with 9 players from one team on the field at a time.
The field is usually composed of a dirt or brick-dust
infield which contains the quadrilateral shape and
running areas, and a grass outfield. However, the field
can consist of other solid and dry surfaces such as
artificial turf or asphalt. There are 4 bases on the infield
(first base, second base, third base,and home plate); the
bases are arranged in a square and are typically 45 to 65
feet (13,7 to 19,8 meters) apart. Near the center of this
square is the pitcher's circle, and within the circle is the
"rubber", a small flat rectangular piece of rubber about a
foot and a half in length. The rubber can be 40 or 43 feet
away from home plate, depending on age level and the
league one is playing in. The object of the game is to score
more runs (points) than the other team by batting (hitting)
a ball into play and running around the bases, touching
each one in succession. The ball is a sphere of light material,
covered with leather or synthetic material. It is 10 to 12
inches (or rarely, 16 inches[12]) (28 to 30.5 centimeters)
in circumference. The game is officiated by one or more
neutral umpires. Players and umpires are generally free
to ask for a brief stoppage at any time when the ball is
not in play, or immediately following a play once its
outcome is clear.
Although many people assume that softball was derived
from baseball, the sports first game actually came about because of a football game. The history of softball dates back to Thanksgi
ving Day of 1887, when several alumni sat in the
Chicago, Illinois Farragut Boat Club, anxiously awaiting
the outcome of the Yale versus Harvard football game.
When Yale was announced as winner, a Yale alumnus
playfully threw a boxing glove at a Harvard supporter. The
Harvard fan swung at the balled-up glove with a stick,
and the rest of the group looked on with interest. George
Hancock, a reporter for the Chicago Board of Trade,
jokingly called out, Play ball! and the first softball game
commenced with the football fans using the boxing glove
as a ball and a broom handle in place of a bat.
In 1934, the Joint Rules Committee on Softball collaborated
to create a set of standardized rules. Up until this point,
the game was being played with varied rules, player
positions, and ball sizes. The original softball used by
the Farragut Boat Club was 16 inches in circumference.
However, Lewis Rober Sr., the man responsible for organizing softball games for firefighters in Minneapolis, used a 12-inch ball.
Robers ball won out as the preferred softball size, and
professional softball games today are played using a
10–12-inch ball. However, many Chicagoans still hold
fast to the belief that real softball is played using a 16-inch
ball. Games using these 16-inch balls are often referred
to as cabbage ball, super slow pitch, and mush ball,
and unlike competitive softball, players are not allowed to
wear fielding gloves.
While the sport was originally advertised as an indoor
game for baseball players looking to maintain their
dexterity during the off season, it gained so much popularity
and recognition that it quickly became its own official sport.
In 1991, womens fast pitch softball was added to the roster
of the 1996 Summer Olympics—a landmark many people
recognize as the ultimate success of a sport. Although
softball was later dropped from the 2012 Summer Olympics
lineup, the game is still one of the most popular participant
sports in the United States and 113 countries have officially
joined the International Softball Federation since the
organizations formation in 1952.
Today, softball is one of the most popular sports in the
country, and an estimated 40 million Americans engage
in at least one softball game each year. Because it can
be played on either a field or an indoor arena, softball
games are played year round and involve teams with
players as young as 8 years old and some players over
60 years in age. Softball is sometimes played by
corecreational leagues, where both women and men play
on the same teams, but the rules are generally modified
to reduce physical inequalities between the sexes.
Often, companies and organizations form amateur coed
teams to play for benefits and charity fund-raiser events.
The history of softball is still unfolding, and the game
has undergone numerous modifications since its
creation in 1887, but it is still one of the most preferred
sports games in the country and has developed a following
in several countries throughout the world, especially in
Australia, China, and Japan. Loved by amateurs and
professionals of all ages and athletic backgrounds, the
world can only anticipate what is in store for the future
of Americas other favorite pastime.