Foul territory or
foul ground is defined as that part of the
playing field outside the first and third base lines extended to the fence and perpendicularly upwards. Note: the foul lines and
foul poles are not part of foul territory. In general, when a batted ball is ruled a foul ball, the ball is dead, all
runners must return to their
time-of-pitch base without liability to be put out, and the batter returns to home plate to continue his
turn at bat. A
strike is issued for the
batter if he had fewer than two strikes. If the batter already has two strikes against him when he hits a foul ball, a strike is not issued unless the ball was
bunted to become a foul ball, in which case a third strike
is issued and a
strikeout recorded for the batter and pitcher. A strike is, however, recorded for the pitcher for every foul ball the batter hits, regardless of the
count. If any member of the fielding team catches a foul ball before it touches the ground or lands outside the field perimeter, the batter is out. However, the caught ball is in play and base runners may attempt to advance. A foul ball is different from a
foul tip, in which the ball makes contact with the bat, travels directly to the catcher's hands, and is caught. In this case, the ball remains live and a strike is added to the batter's count. A batter who hits a foul tip with two strikes on the count is out. To aid umpires in determining whether balls hit over the fence are fair or foul, a tall
foul pole is often erected at each corner of the outfield. A batted ball which hits the foul pole above the fence is
never a foul ball, no matter where it is ultimately deflected off the pole, in this case a
home run is automatically awarded to the batter. In
kickball, foul ball does not make a strike, but three foul balls make an out. == History ==