High school softball rules: Innings and mercy rule explained

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High school softball rules: Innings and mercy rule explained

High school softball games have specific rules for innings and mercy calls. Learn how long games last and when they end early.

High school softball rules: Innings and mercy rule explained

High school softball games have specific rules for innings and mercy calls. Learn how long games last and when they end early.

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Spring showers, warming weather and blooming flowers means that the high school softball season is in full swing.

Throughout the country, teams have been completing for the last few months and inching their way towards postseason play. Each state has a different timeline, with some already in the postseason, some getting ready to start, and a few select others still a few weeks out.

Regardless of where the season is for your state, what do you need to know about the game knockout play getting ready to start?

Unlike sports such as basketball or football, where the quarter lengths differ from high school to college, softball at the high school level is the same length as college.

According to the NFHS, a standard high school game usually lasts between 1.5 and 2 hours and goes for 7 innings. Certain tournaments can put time constraints, but that is not the norm.

If there is a time constraint and both teams are tied, that game will end in a tie. Some tournaments may implement a tiebreaker rule in which the last batter from the prior innings starts the next inning on second base.

Whether it's the regular season or postseason, blowouts are bound to happen. When that does happen, there are rules in place to end a game quickly to get both teams out with incident.

Per NFHS guidelines, the mercy rule is applied after five innings if the team is up by 10 runs. If the home team is the one up in that scenario, the game is called after 4.5 innings.

When a team is up by 12 through four complete innings, the mercy rule is also applied. In the rare case that a game gets completely out of hand early and one team is up by 15 or more runs, the game is called after three complete innings.

While these are the NFHS guidelines, state athletic associations adopt their own run rules. In some cases, such as a tournament, that site may not adopt a mercy rule compared to a regular-season game.

Some states have adopted a 15-run rule after five innings, while others have adopted a 10-run rule after four innings.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY Sports: Breaking down high school softball's mercy rule, game length

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