Moderator: Cartographers


I disagree, 8 is much more likely to be a triple than 3. You almost never see triples hit to the left of the center fielder. Of course it all depends on whose running, whose fielding and how the ball bounces. The way the infielders are positioned, 6 (and maybe 9) could easily be outs (but this is all purely subjective of course). I'd be worried about assigning names to the balls because people might think they mean something.Army of GOD wrote:3,4 are triples, the ones down the lines are doubles and the rest are singles. And yea, natty has to switch the infield grass ones
Good point. I'll take the labels out: It'll just be "Ball 3", "Ball 4", and so on. Not the ones for the home runs, though, because they do mean something. What looks better:carlpgoodrich wrote:I'd be worried about assigning names to the balls because people might think they mean something.
I was thinking about 8 too. Haha it also depends on the field. In Boston nothing to the left side of the field would ever be triple, while right and center field for fast runners is nothing but triples.carlpgoodrich wrote:I disagree, 8 is much more likely to be a triple than 3. You almost never see triples hit to the left of the center fielder. Of course it all depends on whose running, whose fielding and how the ball bounces. The way the infielders are positioned, 6 (and maybe 9) could easily be outs (but this is all purely subjective of course). I'd be worried about assigning names to the balls because people might think they mean something.Army of GOD wrote:3,4 are triples, the ones down the lines are doubles and the rest are singles. And yea, natty has to switch the infield grass ones

For starting neutral armies, that version is graphically outdated but the gameplay is the same. All the land territories start at 1, fielders at 2, batter at 2, field balls at 1, home runs at 7, bases at 5.Riskismy wrote:Aren't the first page suppose to hold the most recent version of the map?
I ask because I was looking for the starting neutral armies. Figuring they would be mentioned in the first post I went and had a look-see, but that version is rather outdated I think.
