A passed ball in baseball is a legally delivered pitch that the catcher fails to control with ordinary effort, thereby allowing one or more baserunners to advance at least one base.[1] This statistic is charged exclusively to the catcher by the official scorer under Rule 9.13 of the Major League Baseball Official Rules, and it applies only when the pitch is catchable by a catcher of average skill but escapes due to mishandling, such as by letting it bounce away or failing to block it properly.[1] Unlike other defensive miscues, a passed ball is not classified as an error, though it can influence game outcomes by enabling stolen bases or advancing runners during key situations like a dropped third strike.[2]The key distinction between a passed ball and a wild pitch lies in responsibility and pitch quality: a wild pitch is charged to the pitcher when the ball is delivered so high, wide, low, or erratically that even ordinary effort by the catcher cannot prevent runners from advancing, often due to the pitcher's control issues.[1] For instance, pitches in the dirt from breaking balls may be deemed passed balls if the catcher should have blocked them, whereas extreme bounces or unpredictable movement (common with knuckleball pitchers) typically result in wild pitches.[3] This differentiation affects pitching statistics, as runs scored directly from a passed ball are unearned and do not count against the pitcher's earned run average (ERA).[2]Passed balls have significant implications in scoring and catcher evaluation, with modern metrics like Statcast's catcher blocking leaderboard measuring a catcher's ability to prevent both passed balls and wild pitches by tracking balls in the dirt and their outcomes.[4] Catchers who handle tricky pitches, such as those from pitchers with high movement, tend to have fewer passed balls; for example, those paired with knuckleballers historically face elevated rates due to the pitch's erratic nature.[5] In terms of records, Pop Snyder holds the all-time MLB career mark with 763 passed balls allowed, while the single-season record is 114 by Rudy Kemmler in 1883, reflecting the evolution of catching equipment and techniques over time.
Definition and Classification
Definition
A passed ball occurs when a catcher fails to control a legally delivered pitch that, with ordinary effort, should have been held under control, thereby allowing any base runner—including the batter-runner on a third strike—to advance one or more bases.[3][2] This misplay is charged solely to the catcher and is not considered an error, though any runs scored as a result are unearned for the pitcher.[2]The key criteria for a passed ball include that the pitch must be catchable with ordinary effort, defined as the standard level of skill expected from a competent catcher, and not one that is wildly errant or beyond routine handling.[3] Additionally, the runner's advance must stem directly from the catcher's failure to secure the ball, such as when the catcher recovers it too late to prevent the base gain; if the catcher retrieves the ball and records an out before the advance, no passed ball is charged.[3] Unlike a wild pitch, which attributes fault to the pitcher's delivery, a passed ball emphasizes the catcher's control lapse on a manageable pitch.[2]Representative examples include a catcher bobbling a low pitch in the dirt, permitting a runner on third base to score, or the ball cleanly passing untouched behind the catcher on a borderline strike, enabling runners to take extra bases.[3] In uncaught third strike scenarios, if the pitch eludes the catcher's ordinary effort without deflection, it is scored as a passed ball, allowing the batter to attempt first base while other runners may advance.[2] Passed balls are denoted as "PB" in scorebooks and box scores, with statistics tracked and attributed to the individual catcher.[2]
Distinction from Wild Pitch
A passed ball and a wild pitch both involve a pitch that the catcher fails to control, allowing one or more runners to advance, but the primary distinction lies in the attribution of fault. A passed ball is charged to the catcher when they fail to exercise ordinary effort to handle a legally delivered pitch that, in the judgment of the official scorer, should have been controllable, such as a pitch that gets past the catcher but remains in the immediate vicinity of home plate.[2] In contrast, a wild pitch is charged to the pitcher when the pitch is so high, wide, or low—often bouncing far from the plate or evading the catcher's glove entirely—that no catcher could reasonably be expected to stop it with ordinary effort.[6] This differentiation ensures that responsibility aligns with the primary cause: the catcher's handling for a passed ball versus the pitcher's delivery for a wild pitch.[3]Neither a passed ball nor a wild pitch is classified as an error, meaning they do not impact a player's error total or the team's defensive statistics in the same way as a fielder's misplay on a ground ball.[2] However, advances by runners solely due to either event are not credited as stolen bases; instead, the runner is awarded the base without theft attribution, unless the runner was already in motion attempting a steal, in which case both the steal and the wild pitch or passed ball may be scored if the advance exceeds the stolen base.[7] Passed balls are specifically recorded as a statistic against the catcher, reflecting their role in pitch framing and control, while wild pitches contribute to the pitcher's overall command metrics.[2]Passed balls must be differentiated from related events like catcher's interference, which occurs when the catcher (or another fielder) physically hinders the batter during a pitch, such as contacting the bat or the batter's hands, resulting in the batter being awarded first base, with each runner advancing one base if forced to do so, or runners attempting to steal being awarded the base they are attempting to reach.[8] Throwing errors, by comparison, arise during attempted plays like steals or pickoffs, where the catcher's throw to a base is errant and allows extra advancement, and are scored as defensive errors rather than pitch-related miscues. Certain pitches, such as knuckleballs, can blur the lines between passed balls and wild pitches due to their erratic movement, but scoring remains based on the catcher's effort relative to the pitch's controllability; for knuckleball pitchers, passed balls tend to be more frequent than wild pitches because the pitches often enter the strike zone but prove difficult to secure.[9]
Rules and Official Scoring
MLB Official Rules
In Major League Baseball, a passed ball is governed primarily by Rule 9.13(b), which charges the catcher with a passed ball when the catcher fails to control a legally delivered pitch with ordinary effort, thereby allowing one or more runners to advance bases.[10] This distinction from a wild pitch, defined in Rule 9.13(a) as a pitch too high, low, or wide for the catcher to handle with ordinary effort and charged to the pitcher, underscores the catcher's responsibility for manageable pitches.[3] A passed ball is not classified as an error under Rule 9.12, but any runs scored as a direct result are unearned and excluded from the pitcher's earned run average calculations per Rule 9.16.[2]Regarding the uncaught third strike, Rule 5.05(a)(2) entitles the batter to advance to first base without liability to be put out if the strike is not caught and passes the catcher, provided first base is unoccupied or there are two outs; in such cases, if the pitch is controllable with ordinary effort, the official scorer charges a passed ball under Rule 9.13(b), scoring the play as a strikeout and passed ball.[10] Runners may advance at their own peril on a passed ball, as the ball remains live under Rule 5.06(a), allowing plays to continue unless the ball goes out of play (e.g., into the stands, awarding one base per Rule 5.06(b)(4)(H)) or creates a dead-ball situation.Special provisions exclude passed ball charges in certain scenarios: no passed ball is possible on an intentional base on balls, as they are awarded by signal to the umpire without throwing pitches (per Rule 5.05(b)(1) Comment), keeping the ball dead throughout the process, or on illegal pitches like balks under Rule 6.02(a), which are separate infractions.[10] Additionally, the batter cannot advance on a passed ball except in the context of an uncaught third strike, as other pitches do not grant batter advancement rights beyond strikes or balls.[10]The determination of whether a pitch qualifies as a passed ball versus a wild pitch rests with the official scorer post-play, based on the catcher's effort in controlling the ball.[3]
Role of the Official Scorer
The official scorer plays a pivotal role in determining whether a pitch qualifies as a passed ball, exercising judgment to assess if the catcher failed to control the ball with ordinary effort, thereby allowing a runner or runners to advance. According to MLB Official Rule 9.12(b), this decision hinges on whether the legally pitched ball should have been held or controlled by an average catcher under normal circumstances, distinguishing it from a wild pitch which attributes fault to the pitcher.[1][2]This judgment call rests solely with the official scorer, who observes the game from the press box and has authority to review available video replay during or immediately after the play to inform their decision.[11] The scorer must finalize such rulings within the game if possible, but Rule 9.02(c) permits changes to judgment decisions up to 24 hours after the game's conclusion, ensuring timely but deliberate assessment.[1]When a passed ball is charged, it is attributed exclusively to the catcher, impacting their individual passed balls statistic but not classified as an error, thus leaving the catcher's fielding percentage unaffected.[2] Unlike a wild pitch, which directly influences the pitcher's earned run average and wild pitch totals, a passed ball carries no direct statistical penalty for the pitcher.[3]Teams, players, or their representatives may challenge a scorer's ruling by appealing to MLB's scoring appeals committee, a process introduced in 2012 to promote consistency across games, though such appeals remain infrequent due to the scorer's established authority.[12] Modern technologies like Statcast provide data on pitch location and catcher blocking efficiency to assist scorers in their analysis, but they do not supersede the official scorer's subjective judgment.[4]Passed balls occur more frequently with pitchers throwing unpredictable pitches like the knuckleball, where even skilled catchers may exceed the ordinary effort threshold; for instance, Bob Uecker led the National League with 27 passed balls in 1967 while catching for knuckleballer Phil Niekro. However, a passed ball is not charged if a runner's advance results primarily from unrelated factors, such as an overthrow during a play, rather than the catcher's failure to control the pitch.[1]
Historical Development
Origins in Early Baseball
In the pre-1870s era of informal "base ball," catchers operated with minimal protective gear, often standing far behind the batter to field pitches on the bounce using bare hands, which made securing the ball challenging and led to frequent passed balls where the catcher failed to control a pitch, allowing runners to advance.[13] This vulnerability was exacerbated by the physical demands of the position, as catchers endured injuries from foul tips and wild throws without masks or gloves, contributing to the commonality of such miscues in early games.[13]The concept of a passed ball emerged in connection with the uncaught third strike rule established in the Knickerbocker Rules of 1845, which allowed the batter to become a runner if the catcher did not cleanly catch the third strike, effectively treating the misplay as an opportunity for advancement similar to a passed ball on other pitches.[14] By the late 1850s and 1860s, the term "passed ball" or "ball past catcher" was documented in use, describing a muffed pitch by the catcher that permitted a base to be run, though "ball past catcher" was more prevalent during that decade.[15]With the formation of the National League in 1876, passed balls were first formally scored as a distinct event, charged to the catcher when runners advanced due to a misplay on legally delivered strikes or balls, distinguishing it from pitcher errors and integrating it into official statistics from the league's inaugural season. This formalization built on earlier professional play in the National Association (1871–1875), where such events were informally noted but now became part of standardized scoring to track defensive performance.Early examples highlight the prevalence of passed balls amid primitive equipment and pitching styles dominated by high-velocity straight fastballs without breaking curves, which were not widespread until after Candy Cummings' invention in 1867.[16] In the 1883 season, catcher Rudy Kemmler set a single-season record with 114 passed balls, reflecting the era's challenges before the introduction of catcher's masks around 1877 and gloves in the 1880s.[17] Pop Snyder's career total of 763 passed balls from 1873 to 1891 exemplifies this, as catchers were often viewed as inherently weak links in the defense due to the lack of protection, enduring constant risk to handle unpredictable, hard-thrown pitches barehanded.[18][13]
Evolution and Rule Changes
In the early 1900s, the introduction of advanced catcher's protective gear, including improved chest protectors and shin guards, significantly reduced the frequency of passed balls by allowing catchers to position themselves lower behind the plate and better control pitches.[13] Prior to widespread adoption around 1900-1910, catchers often stood farther back due to injury risks, leading to higher incidences of balls getting past them; this gear evolution enabled more secure framing and blocking.[19] Concurrently, rule clarifications in the early 20th century, building on 19th-century foundations, emphasized the distinction between passed balls and wild pitches through concepts of catcher responsibility under "ordinary effort," though the formal definition of the term was established in 1909 under Rule 85, Section 10.[20]The mid-20th century saw a spike in passed balls during the knuckleball era from the 1940s to the 1980s, as pitchers like Hoyt Wilhelm, Charlie Hough, and Phil Niekro relied on the unpredictable pitch, resulting in league-leading totals such as Hough's associated 35 passed balls in a single season.[21] This period also featured early discussions in the 1960s about incorporating instant replay technology—first broadcast in 1959—to aid umpiring decisions, including potential reviews for passed balls, but no formal implementation occurred until Statcast's 2015 debut provided data-driven metrics like catcher blocking to evaluate prevention of passed balls and wild pitches more objectively.[22][4]Post-2023, MLB has implemented no major rule changes to passed ball scoring, maintaining the Official Rules' focus on catcher control with ordinary effort, though increased use of data analytics and video replay in official scorer training has enhanced consistency in judgments.[23] The overall frequency of passed balls has declined due to superior training, gear advancements, and communication tools like PitchCom, dropping from approximately 0.4-0.5 per team per game in the 1980s—amid higher knuckleball usage—to around 0.05 per team per game in the 2020s.[24][25]Internationally, passed ball rules in Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) and the World Baseball Classic (WBC) mirror MLB's standards, with scorers applying similar criteria for ordinary effort and runner advancement. However, cultural differences in scoring philosophy may lead to slight variations in leniency, as NPB emphasizes precise defensive execution, potentially resulting in fewer passed ball calls compared to MLB's interpretive approach.[26]
Impact on the Game
Effects on Runners and Scoring
A passed ball permits all runners on base to advance one base without liability to be put out, unless the ball deflects far enough to allow additional bases, in which case runners may advance further at their own risk. On a third strike, if the pitch is a passed ball, the batter becomes a runner and is entitled to first base, while any runners may also advance, potentially creating multiple baserunners from what would otherwise be an out. This advancement occurs because the catcher's failure to control the pitch leaves the ball live, enabling runners to proceed as long as they can reach the next base before being tagged or forced out.[3][2]In terms of scoring, any run that scores directly as a result of a passed ball is classified as unearned and not charged against the pitcher's earned run average (ERA), as the official scorer reconstructs the inning to determine if the run would have scored without the catcher's misplay. This distinction means passed balls can transform routine strikeouts into scoring opportunities, such as when a runner from third base scores on a passed third strike, or force defensive plays that might otherwise be avoided. For instance, a passed ball can effectively turn a strikeout into the equivalent of a hit by allowing the batter and runners to reach safely, thereby increasing the inning's run expectancy without crediting the offense with a base hit.[2][27]Runners attempting to advance on a passed ball do so at their own peril, meaning the defense can recover the ball and record outs by tagging or force plays, which adds a layer of risk in real-time decision-making. This peril is particularly pronounced in close games, where a passed ball might enable a tying or go-ahead run; a notable example occurred in Game 4 of the 1941 World Series, when Brooklyn Dodgers catcher Mickey Owen allowed a passed ball on a third strike, enabling New York Yankees batter Tommy Henrich to reach first base safely and sparking a four-run rally that secured a 7-4 victory and contributed to the Yankees' championship. Such events underscore how passed balls can shift momentum dramatically in high-stakes situations.[28]Passed balls occur infrequently but can influence game outcomes, with league-wide averages hovering around 0.09 to 0.10 per game in recent seasons like 2023, 2024, and 2025, though rates rise in high-strikeout eras due to more third-strike opportunities. Their impact on win probability varies by situation—for example, with a runner on third and fewer than two outs, a passed ball heightens scoring chances without defensive credit. This rarity amplifies their strategic weight, often turning pivotal innings.[25][29]
Influence on Pitcher-Catcher Strategies
Teams often prioritize catcher selection based on their ability to handle specific pitching styles, particularly for knuckleball pitchers whose unpredictable movement increases the risk of passed balls. For instance, the Boston Red Sox paired knuckleballer Tim Wakefield with Doug Mirabelli as his personal catcher starting in 2002, recognizing Mirabelli's specialized skills in managing the pitch's erratic path.[30] In 2006, the Red Sox traded for Mirabelli from the San Diego Padres specifically to catch Wakefield after backup Josh Bard allowed 10 passed balls in limited innings, highlighting how teams mitigate passed ball risks through targeted pairings.[31] Defensive metrics, such as Statcast's Catcher Blocking, quantify a catcher's effectiveness in preventing passed balls and wild pitches by measuring runs prevented through blocking skill, influencing draft decisions and roster construction.[4]Pitch calling strategies between pitchers and catchers are adjusted to minimize passed ball occurrences, with catchers employing pitch framing techniques on low pitches to maintain control and secure strikes without the ball escaping. Catchers position their gloves to subtly guide borderline low pitches, reducing the likelihood of the ball skipping away, while pitchers may alter velocity or location—such as aiming for the lower zone with more sink—to facilitate better handling by the receiver.[32] These tactics emphasize collaboration, as evidenced in catcher defense analyses that link effective framing and blocking to fewer passed balls overall.[33]Training for catchers has evolved significantly with the advent of data analytics and technology since the introduction of Statcast in 2015, enabling targeted drills to reduce passed ball incidence through simulators that replicate pitch movements and provide real-time feedback on blocking efficiency. The 2023 debut of Statcast's Catcher Blocking metric has further refined training by allowing teams to benchmark performance against league averages, leading to customized regimens that lower passed ball rates league-wide.[34] Historically, catchers like Bob Uecker, who caught knuckleball pitchers for the Atlanta Braves and Philadelphia Phillies in the 1960s, exemplified the challenges, leading the [National League](/page/National League) with 27 passed balls in 1967 despite limited playing time, often joking about the difficulty of receiving such pitches.[35]High passed ball rates can disrupt team dynamics, prompting increased bullpen usage to preserve leads after runners advance and influencing defensive alignments to compensate for vulnerabilities behind the plate. In fantasy baseball, catchers with strong blocking profiles—low passed ball rates—command higher valuations due to their defensive contributions, which indirectly boost team run prevention and win probabilities.[36]
Records and Statistics
Career and Seasonal Leaders
In baseball, passed balls are primarily attributed to catchers, and records reflect cumulative totals over careers and seasons. The all-time career leader in passed balls is Pop Snyder with 763, accumulated during his tenure from 1876 to 1892, a figure inflated by the era's lack of protective equipment and smaller gloves that made controlling pitches far more challenging.[18] Following him are Silver Flint with 639 (1878-1889) and Doc Bushong with 553 (1875-1889), both products of the 19th-century game where barehanded or minimally padded catching was common.[18]For the post-1900 era, Lance Parrish holds the record with 192 passed balls from 1977 to 1995, largely due to his exposure to varied pitching styles including knuckleballs during his time with the Detroit Tigers and other teams.[18]Ted Simmons ranks second in this period with 182 (1968-1988). Other notable post-1900 catchers include Rick Ferrell and Jorge Posada, each with 142. Jason Varitek recorded 105 (1997-2011), a total influenced by catching knuckleballer Tim Wakefield for the Boston Red Sox.[18] These modern figures represent a sharp decline from 19th-century totals, attributable to advancements in catcher's mitts—such as the introduction of larger, padded designs in the early 20th century—and improved training techniques that enhanced pitch framing and blocking.[37]
The all-time single-season leader is Rudy Kemmler with 114 in 1883, again reflecting the rudimentary equipment of the time that allowed pitches to elude catchers frequently.[38] In the post-1900 era, Geno Petralli set the record with 35 in 1987 while catching for the Texas Rangers, many of which occurred on knuckleballs thrown by Charlie Hough.[39] Other notable post-1900 seasons include J.C. Martin with 33 in 1965 and Gus Triandos with 28 in 1959, the latter tied to catching Hoyt Wilhelm's knuckleball for the BaltimoreOrioles.[38]
Post-1950, passed ball totals have continued to decline, with no catcher exceeding 30 since 1987 and many seasons featuring totals under 20, such as Russell Martin's 19 in 2015; this trend stems from further equipment innovations like oversized mitts designed for erratic pitches and better pitcher-catcher coordination.[38] Since 2000, the highest seasonal mark is Jarrod Saltalamacchia's 26 in 2011, underscoring the rarity of high totals today. In recent years, totals have dropped further, with the 2024 leader at 11 (Francisco Alvarez) and many catchers recording 0-5 in 2025.[38]Major League Baseball tracks these statistics through official scorers, with comprehensive data available via Baseball-Reference, showing no significant record changes as of the 2025 season.[18] The active career leader is Yasmani Grandal with 100 passed balls.Historically, the American League has recorded higher passed ball totals than the National League, particularly from the 1950s to 1980s, due to a greater prevalence of knuckleball pitchers like Wilhelm and Hough in the AL, which exacerbated catcher errors compared to the NL's emphasis on conventional pitching styles.[37]
Notable Single-Game Records
The modern major league record for passed balls by a catcher in a single game is six, a mark first set by Rube Vickers of the Cincinnati Reds on October 4, 1902, during a 7-1 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates.[5] Vickers, a pitcher by trade, was pressed into emergency duty behind the plate in a meaningless late-season contest where the Reds showed little effort, allowing runners to advance freely on the errant pitches.[40] The record stood alone for 85 years until Geno Petralli of the Texas Rangers matched it on August 30, 1987, in a 9-4 loss to the Detroit Tigers, where Petralli struggled to corral knuckleballer Charlie Hough's unpredictable pitches.[41] Petralli tied the mark again in the third inning of that game with three passed balls alone.[42]Jerry Goff of the Houston Astros became the third catcher to reach six on May 12, 1996, during a 7-6 defeat to the Montreal Expos, with the miscues distributed across the first, third, and fourth innings while handling a mix of Astros relievers including Doug Jones.[43]In single-inning passed balls, the major league record is four, achieved three times in the modern era, all involving knuckleball pitchers. Ray Katt of the New York Giants first set the mark on September 10, 1954, in the eighth inning of a 3-1 win over the Milwaukee Braves, as he failed to control four pitches from Hoyt Wilhelm, allowing two runners to score.[44] Geno Petralli matched it on August 22, 1987, in the seventh inning against the Cleveland Indians, again catching Charlie Hough, which permitted multiple baserunners to advance and contributed to unearned scoring. Most recently, Ryan Lavarnway of the Boston Red Sox tied the record on August 6, 2013, in the first inning of a 15-10 victory over the Houston Astros, struggling with debutant Steven Wright's knuckleball and allowing three runs to score before the Red Sox rallied.[45]One of the most infamous instances occurred in Petralli's 1987game against the Tigers, where his six passed balls directly led to three unearned runs for Detroit, exacerbating the Rangers' 9-4 defeat and highlighting the challenges of handling a knuckleball in high-stakes at-bats.[41] These extreme outings often prompted immediate managerial responses, such as catcher substitutions; for example, after Lavarnway's rough first inning in 2013, the Red Sox shifted him to first base while inserting David Ross to handle Wright.[46] No catcher has surpassed six passed balls in a game since 1996, and as of 2025, these records remain intact.[5]Such high-mark games are exceptionally rare, occurring in fewer than 0.01% of major league contests since 1900, largely due to advancements in catcher's equipment and the decline of knuckleball pitchers.[37]