Triple play


In baseball, a triple play is the rare act of making three outs during the same continuous play.
Triple plays happen infrequently – there have been 721 triple plays in Major League Baseball since 1876, an average of approximately five per season – because they depend on a combination of two elements, which are themselves uncommon:
The most likely scenario for a triple play is no outs with runners on first base and second base, which has been the case for the majority of MLB triple plays. In that context, two examples of triple plays are:
The most recent triple play in MLB was turned by the Chicago Cubs on July 29, 2020, against the Cincinnati Reds in the bottom of the seventh inning. With the bases loaded, the Reds batter, Shogo Akiyama, hit a line drive to third base. Kris Bryant caught the ball, stepped on third, and threw to Anthony Rizzo at first base.

Unassisted triple plays

The rarest type of triple play, and one of the rarest events of any kind in baseball, is for a single fielder to complete all three outs. There have only been 15 unassisted triple plays in MLB history, making this feat rarer than a perfect game.
Typically, an unassisted triple play is achieved when a middle infielder catches a line drive near second base, steps on the base before the runner who started there can tag up, and then tags the runner advancing from first before he can return there. Of the 15 unassisted triple plays in MLB history, 12 have been completed in this manner by a middle infielder.

Most recent MLB unassisted triple play

The most recent MLB unassisted triple play is consistent with the above – it occurred on August 23, 2009, by second baseman Eric Bruntlett of the Philadelphia Phillies, in a game against the New York Mets. In the bottom of the ninth inning with men on first and second, the base runners were both running when Jeff Francoeur hit a line drive very close to second base, which Bruntlett was covering. Bruntlett caught the ball, stepped on second before Luis Castillo could tag up, and then tagged Daniel Murphy who was approaching from first. This was only the second game-ending unassisted triple play in MLB history, the first one having occurred in 1927.

Unfielded triple play

Political columnist and baseball enthusiast George Will posed one hypothetical way that a triple play could occur with no fielder touching the ball. With runners on first and second and no outs, the batter hits an infield fly, and is automatically out: one out. The runner from first passes the runner from second and is called out for that infraction: two outs. Just after that, the falling ball hits the runner from second, who is called out for interference: three outs.
Whenever a batter or runner is out without a fielder touching the ball, MLB rule book section 10.09 provides for automatic putouts to be assigned by the official scorer. In this case, the first out would be credited to whoever the official scorer believes would have had the best chance of catching the infield fly. The second and third outs would be credited to the fielder closest to the points the runners were, when their respective outs occurred. Under the scenario described above, the same fielder could be credited with all three putouts, thus attaining an unassisted triple play without having touched the ball.
Texas League Hall of Famer Keith Bodie tells Sporting News that this event occurred in a 1986 spring training game.

Odd and notable triple plays

The statistics below reflect historical totals through July 29, 2020.

Baserunners

Position of baserunners when the triple play started.
Men on baseOccurrencesPercentage
1 2 -485
1 2 3130
1 - 369
- 2 336
1 2 1
Total721100

June 11, 1885, by the New York Giants against the Providence Grays, scored as 4*-4*-3*, with a newspaper account the next day naming the fielders, batter, and runners at first and second; however, it is unknown if there was a runner at third base.

Outs

Asterisks denote which players recorded outs, per standard baseball positions.
Combinations that have occurred at least 10 times are listed.
FieldersOccurrencesPercentageMost recent
5*-4*-3*10007-Aug-2019
6*-4*-3*5701-Sep-2015
4*-6*-3*4406-Jun-2014
3*-3*-6*3923-Sep-2016
6*-6*-3*2808-Jul-2016
4*-4*-3*2202-May-2017
4*-3*-6*1803-May-1985
1*-6*-3*1619-May-1997
6-4*-3*-2*1328-Apr-1971
5*-5*-3*1129-Jul-2020
5-4*-3*-2*1024-Aug-2014
Total358

Source:

Cultural references

On June 27, 1967, the New York Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates staged a triple play before their game at Shea Stadium for the film The Odd Couple. The scene depicts Bill Mazeroski of the Pirates grounding into a game-ending 5-4-3 triple play. Mazeroski, who played 17 major league seasons, was only involved in one actual MLB triple play; he was the runner on second base when the Chicago Cubs turned a 3-3-6 triple play on October 3, 1965.