
Chicago-style softball is similar to the standard game of softball played competitively and recreationally around the country. However, there are some major differences in the rules and fabric of the game that make it very different. Players who are new to Chicago-style softball are usually taken aback and wonder why they are not playing standard softball. However, if you grew up playing the game, you couldn’t imagine playing softball any other way.
1. The most notable difference between Chicago softball and standard softball is the size of the ball. The Chicago softball is 16 inches in diameter, compared with the 12-inch standard-size softball. The ball is huge by comparison, and those who have played a lot of 12-inch softball have a tough time making the switch. It’s difficult to throw and it can be difficult to hit for distance. OSSO will provide all balls for game play.
2. Fielders are not allowed to wear gloves while playing Chicago-style softball. While the ball is large and can be caught with two hands, playing barehanded will punish infielders who have line drives hit at them in the first two innings. That’s because the ball is very hard the first two innings or so, but once it gets hit around for a while, it softens up. That’s of little comfort to a first baseman who has to catch a steaming throw from a shortstop who is trying to throw the batter out at first. Many players will suffer hand and finger injuries as a result of catching hard line drives or throws from infielders.
3. Pitching in Chicago-style softball is also quite different than standard softball. Instead of pitching from the mound or the rubber, the pitcher is allowed to take a sideways or backward jump off the rubber and pitch from where he lands. He cannot be closer than the pitching rubber, but he can create a different angle to pitch from in order to confuse the batter. The pitch is a high-arching pitch that will be called a strike if some part of the ball crosses the plate between the batter’s shoulders and knees. If the pitch is over the batter’s head but drops sharply so a small part of the ball dips to shoulder level at the rear portion of the plate, the pitch is called a strike. This will occasionally cause problems for hitters, but the game is primarily noted for players who can drive the big ball tremendous distances.
4. A batter gets only 4 total swings in Chicago-style softball. If a pitch is a called or swinging strike and the second pitch is fouled off, the player gets one more foul before being declared out. You only get four opportunities to swing the bat, and if you can’t put it in play by the fouth swing, you are out. If a pitcher throws four balls, it’s a base on balls.
5. Players are not allowed to steal bases and they are not allowed to take leads.
During the regular season games are to be played within time allotted (warm up time is included).
A Head Ref will be provided by OSSO Sports & Social to supervise the game. It will be the umpire’s responsibility to coordinate and run the games, which include the following tasks:
· Starting games on time.
· Calling outs, making final calls on any disputed balls or strikes.
· Settling all disputes or disputed calls.
It is understood that Refs will assist in the tracking of the score (i.e. Announcing it between innings) and assist in any discrepancies with regards to the coed line-up ratios. However, it is the responsibility of both teams to maintain their respective line-ups and scores each inning.
Each team must provide at least two base refs each week to help the head ref with Out/Safe & Fair Foul calls. The base refs will need to pay attention, but the Head Ref has the right to overrule any base ref on a call they see clearly.
A version of softball that originated in Chicago, IL.
It is played just like regular softball with a few exceptions:
• The ball is considerably larger and a bit softer than a normal softball.
• The ball is stitched together much differently than a normal softball.
• Since the ball is so large, gloves are not permitted (the ball is so big, it would never fit in a glove anyway) and the ball must be caught with your bare hands. According to a friend from Chicago (who introduced me to the game), this is because the people who invented the game could not afford to buy gloves.
The greatest game ever created, and one that anyone can play. Essentially the same rules as regular softball, but the addition of the larger 16″ ball changes the game dramatically. The role of the pitcher is almost nullified, essentially reduced to serving up meatballs for the batters to hit. Because anyone can get a hit, the ball is always being put into play and a strikeout is truly the sign of a talentless hack.
The other main departure is the fact that gloves are not to be worn, under any circumstances. This may be a little tough on the hands, but it is seriously more fun. The original reason that no gloves are used were to make the game as cheap to play as possible. To many poor Chicago families the cost of gloves and other equipment would have been impossible to pay, so
Chicago softball reqires only a ball and a bat. To many old-school Chicagoans wearing a glove while playing softball is an absolute cardinal sin.
Chicago style softball was so popular in the 1930s that the Windy City Softball League was formed and the games drew thousands of people from around the city. In 1977 for the first time the Chicago Park District allowed players to use gloves in the summer league that played in Grant Park. Columnist Mike Royko was so incensed that he sued the city. Royko claimed that allowing people to wear gloves “runs contrary to the spirit of 16-inch softball and unfairly penalizes those with talent and calloused hands and gives an unfair advantage to those with tender and well-manicured hands.” Apparently the judge hearing the case was old-school too because he ruled in favor of Royko and gloves were not allowed.
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