This would probably be the judgment of the umpire. If he felt the ball was under control as the fielder touched the base, the runner would be out. If he felt that the ball was not fully under control and hitting the base caused the ball to come out of the glove, the runner would be safe.
No...as soon as the batted ball touches the runner, the ball is dead.
As long as the ball does not touch the ground or a wall, the batter is called out.
well if a player has the ball and is about to tag you you can slide under the ball. if its a play at home and the catcher has the ball, you slide in and knock the catcher down the ball pops out of the glove you are safe, sliding can also prevent injuries. well you slide in at home! if it is close and you are not sure if you are going to get out you should slide in! make sure that you have a sliding pad! :)if not you will get bloody knees:( and if there is a play at home and you dont slide you will be out!:(
If he catches the ball on the fly he is out. If he fields a ground ball and does no throw to first he is safe. If he pops up and the umpire rules "infield fly" he is out.
a doctor
ball pops out of my mouth
It is located behind the glove box. You have to fully open glove box then slide the strap off sideways. then the box pops off hinges.
it doesn't count
Yes. A dropped foul ball can be considered an error if the official scorer deems that the player should have caught the ball. The batter will not reach base in this case. However, if the batter subsequently scores a run, the run will be unearned. Notably, an error on a dropped foul ball would not disrupt a pitcher's attempt to record a perfect game.
yes but he pops the ball when he headers the it
There is a switch in the glove box that pops it open.
Not sure, I have a Toyota rav4 and a friend showed me my cabin filter, It is behind the glove box. The glove box comes out completely and the filter pops out. Hope that helps