Nine innings, nine players. It is one of baseball’s most familiar numbers, so woven into the game that most fans never stop to ask where it came from. But baseball was not always played this way. In its earliest days there were no innings at all, just a race to a target score. So why does baseball have nine innings, and how did the game settle on that number?
The answer is a genuinely interesting slice of 19th-century history involving darkness-shortened games, a famous rules convention, and one persistent man who pushed for nine. Here is the full story.
The chart below traces how baseball arrived at nine innings, plus how innings work today. Take a look, then we’ll walk through it.
Contents
Why Does Baseball Have 9 Innings?
Baseball has nine innings because of decisions made at a rules convention in 1857, but the story really begins with how unstructured the early game was. In baseball’s infancy there were no innings at all. Under the original 1845 Knickerbocker rules, a game was a race to a target score: the first team to reach 21 “aces” (the 19th-century word for runs) was the winner, regardless of how long that took. In an era when scoring was easy, this worked fine, games averaged only about six innings in the 1840s and could feature wildly high scores. But as the game matured, that system started to break down.
The Problem With the Old System
The race-to-21 format created an unpredictable mess. As players got better and pitching began to catch up with hitting, those 21 runs became harder and harder to reach. Some games ended quickly, while others dragged on for hours. The breaking point came in 1856, when a game ended in a 12-12 tie because it was called on account of darkness, this was the era before stadium lights, so once the sun went down, play simply could not continue. That unresolved game made it obvious that baseball needed a fixed structure, a set number of innings, so that contests would have a predictable length and a clear ending.
The 1857 Convention and the Decision
To solve the problem, baseball clubs gathered for a convention in 1857 to standardize the rules. The big question was simple: exactly how many innings should a game be? The debate centered on seven versus nine. In the early game, the number of players on a side often dictated the number of innings, and the influential Knickerbockers leaned toward seven men and seven innings. The committee had to settle it once and for all, and the decision would shape baseball forever. Rather than tie game length loosely to however many players showed up, the clubs wanted a firm, consistent standard that every team would follow.
The Man Who Pushed for Nine
The deciding figure was Louis F. Wadsworth. Although he was part of the Knickerbocker delegation, which favored a seven-inning game, Wadsworth argued forcefully for nine innings and nine men on each side. He persuaded the other clubs on the committee to back the nine-inning game, and the desire for a more competitive, defense-oriented contest won out. From that point on, nine innings and nine players became the standard. It is a great example of how one persistent voice at the right moment can leave a permanent mark, every nine-inning game played since traces back to Wadsworth winning that argument.
How Innings Actually Work
Once nine innings became the rule, the structure of the game settled into the form we know today. Each inning has two halves: in the top half, the visiting team bats while the home team plays defense, and in the bottom half, they switch. A team keeps batting until the defense records three outs, then the half-inning ends. Across a full nine-inning game, each team gets nine turns at bat and typically makes 27 outs. One quirk: the home team may bat fewer than 27 outs, if it is already leading after the top of the ninth, there is no need to play the bottom half. If the score is tied after nine, the game goes to extra innings until someone wins.
Do All Games Have Nine Innings?
Nine innings is the professional standard, but it is not universal across all of baseball. College and high school games are often shorter, high school games are typically seven innings, while many college games run the full nine. Little League and youth games are usually six innings, scaled down to fit younger players’ stamina and time constraints. Softball, a close cousin of baseball, is generally played in seven innings, partly because of its smaller field and different ball. So while the nine-inning game is the gold standard set back in 1857, the “right” number of innings really depends on the level of play. For more on game structure, see our piece on who bats first in baseball.
The Bottom Line
Baseball has nine innings thanks to a decision made at the 1857 rules convention, where Louis Wadsworth successfully argued for nine innings and nine men over the seven that the Knickerbockers preferred. Before that, the game was a race to 21 runs with no fixed length, a system that fell apart once a tied game was called for darkness in 1856 and exposed the need for structure. The nine-inning format gave baseball a predictable, balanced shape that has endured for more than 165 years, even as youth, high school, and softball games adopted shorter formats. It is one of those traditions that feels timeless precisely because it was settled so early in the game’s history.