Wiktionary
n. (context baseball English) A pitch which was intentionally thrown outside to the catcher who stands up with the pitch for the purpose of enabling the catcher to throw out a runner. vb. (context baseball intransitive English) To intentionally throw the ball outside to the catcher who stands up with the pitch for the purpose of enabling the catcher to throw out a runner
Usage examples of "pitch out".
He remained up at the plate and hit the next pitch out of the park, but collapsed rounding third.
Once, after he had made about twelve feet, Schaffer looked down to gauge his chances if he let go and dropped down to the floor beneath, and rapidly concluded that the chances were either that he would break both legs or, if he landed at all awkwardly, would pitch out two hundred feet down to the valley below.
Ten minutes but it was a question of chance, not time, hit the door open and pitch out and hope not to break a leg and try to run before the snow was pockmarked around my feet and they corrected the aim and I knew it hadn't been worth it.
She growled, and the man clutched the fur between her shoulders again, held on for help as she climbed the last pitch out.
He would make one pass over the runway to check it over-and hope to get someone's attention-then pitch out, enter the visual pattern and land.
It did blow during the first round of the 1997 Open at Troon, where Justin Leonard had to pitch out of rough frequently to within wedge distance of the green on his incoming nine the first round.
I slammed the door open and began to pitch out my gear -- the unbreakable stuff that would survive the slight fall.
Stand here too long, and he'd pitch out the window like dice rattling out of a cup.