 Battle of two original 13 colonies, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania's up five to three. They've had themselves a nice inning. There's no outs yet. And that is not a strike because it was up there. It wasn't down there like the catcher wants the ump to believe the one oh, that's a strike. Okay. Maybe a coach yells, he says, it's all right, it's all right. Calm down. Calm down. Then he's gonna swing at that ball and all dough. Come on. Come on. Don't give him one. Composes himself, composes himself. Deep breath. I like this little kid. Oh, he's the catcher too. That's way up. Not chasing that. That's way up to ball four. Oh, oh, oh, that's only three. That's only three. Sorry. Sorry, blue. That's my bad. Bam. Gone. Full count. Ooh, swings just under that fast ball. So that's out number one of the inning now. That's a ball outside. That's a foul ball. That's a foul ball. The one, two, that's outside because it was over there, not over there. And then the two, two again, a ball, the three, two, put in play. Now here's where everything gets fun. Caught. That's the second out. Hell of a play by the left fielder. They throw it in and the guy is running home and that's the third out. The inning's over, but wait, there's more. Everybody's a little confused. Now we have both runners running, both runners stopping, both runners running tag, tag, fourth out, fifth out of the inning. Everybody's out. Everyone's saying, what just happened? First baseman's like, that's three. Guy on first, that's three outs, yo. And he says, he caught it. I don't know if he's talking to the first base coach or the kid who hit it. Now this kid, he's like, what's going on? And he's like, oh, okay. Yeah, that was three outs. We got the three outs. I kept track. They're asking questions and the duggers, he caught it. Now let's watch it back and slow it down. I was surprised to see that the runner at second tagged up. He's got his foot on the base, so he probably waited. He probably saw that this was caught because he had a good view. Tagged up, went to third, really good base running, but then went home. And that's odd base running. I don't know if he got sent home or if he just went home. But first, I thought this kid might be out and they would have to tag him back up at second base, but no, they had to actually tag him. If he scored, this run would have counted. I thought he left early, but it looks like he tagged up. Anyway, he's out, so the inning ends there and the pitcher seems to know the inning ends there. He's just kind of walking and then the catcher doesn't seem to know what ends. The first baseman, he's like, that's three outs, right? Now the kid running second is the one that hit the ball. So he's running, so maybe he has no idea it got caught. The other kid was tagging up at first, but I think he feels pressure to run because the kid who hit it got to first base and was like, run! We can't both be on first, but then they both start running and then they both start heading back. And actually, I think when the shorter kid, if he crosses the other kid there, there's an out. The inning's over. I don't know why the umps aren't yelling. The little kid is like, go, man, you're holding me up. And then the big kid's like, what are you doing? He caught it. He caught it. But what are you doing though? And what is the kid doing? And he caught it, but none of it mattered at all. There was already three outs. Unless in the little league, they start deciding to do roll over outs. My grand idea, turn a triple play, carry some over the next inning. Why not?