To the untrained eye, baseball is a simplistic sport requiring the most elite players to fulfill the basic tasks of running, throwing, and catching. Anyone who has attempted to play baseball understands the difficulty behind the seemingly easy tasks. The skill required to throw, run, is unmatched in any other major American sport to this day. Baseball as a sport has grown to captivate a wide audience and professional following. According to a data collection website , an estimated 13.39 million people participate in baseball in the United States. These consumers have exhausted a total of $619 million for equipment necessary to playing the sport. For a game that quickly became the United States’ most popular leisure activity, it’s peculiar that …show more content…
Over 12 professional clubs attended and during this meeting Daniel “Doc” Adams was proclaimed the first President of the Convention and headed the Committee on Rules and Regulations. This convention clarified the rules of baseball and added new rules stating that the bases were to be separated at a distance of 30 yards, a minimum of 5 innings is to be played to count as a game, a regulation pitcher’s mound was established, pop-outs and strikeouts became outs, and that no out could be made on a foul ball. It was important that a systematic regulation system be put in place because with set rules the game innately became increasingly …show more content…
Soldiers sought solace from the nightmares of war and their used recreation time to play baseball. The New Yorkers that understood the game of baseball began teaching comrades in their companies from Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Michigan, Ohio, and many other northern states. Everyone was immersed with the game and played in every crack of time they could muster. Both Union and Confederate offers endorsed the game as a morale building exercise and an excellent means of physical fitness. Generals noted that team boning experienced on the baseball diamond had a large correlation to the battle field. When the sport was played in war encampments, the teams were conceived purely off of a soldier’s skill and not military rank. Baseball became so serious in the American Civil War that every company had their own baseball