A game played by stones in a smoke circle where you hold the smoke in until the blunt comes back to you.
by Merij November 11, 2014

by marhe March 8, 2017

An inside joke from the Al Jokes community, where a person explains the phrase 'that tracks' to his friend, but his friend misunderstands and thinks 'baseball huh' is the phrase that was explained.
The phrase is now used randomly in the comment sections of many creators - not just Al Jokes.
The original video is titled "when you hear a phrase you’re going to be stealing"
The phrase is now used randomly in the comment sections of many creators - not just Al Jokes.
The original video is titled "when you hear a phrase you’re going to be stealing"
“I was mugged by a diverse gentleman on my way to a Tigers game in Detroit”
“Baseball huh?”
“Precisely”
A comment from the original video - @nunziocombattelli6311
“Baseball huh?”
“Precisely”
A comment from the original video - @nunziocombattelli6311
by Batootihead March 20, 2025

"Baseball, huh?" has two uses:
1) a direct replacement for the phrase "That tracks"
2) as a meaningless response to anything.
The phrase is less frequently used in it's original meaning of "That tracks", and more often it is used as a punchline to subvert expectations; to reference the absurdity of mentioning baseball when it's irrelevant, whilst pretending to be unaware of the irrelevance.
Originated from YouTuber "Al Jokes", when he made a sketch about someone misunderstanding the meaning of the two-part phrase "Baseball, huh? That tracks", and mistakenly using "Baseball, huh?" in place of "That tracks". The phrase has been transformed by the internet hive-mind into a "The Waffle House Has Found Its New Host" type phrase, where it's spread is far beyond the original source to the point it now has little association. It has become an internet phenomenon larger than what it was originally imagined to be.
1) a direct replacement for the phrase "That tracks"
2) as a meaningless response to anything.
The phrase is less frequently used in it's original meaning of "That tracks", and more often it is used as a punchline to subvert expectations; to reference the absurdity of mentioning baseball when it's irrelevant, whilst pretending to be unaware of the irrelevance.
Originated from YouTuber "Al Jokes", when he made a sketch about someone misunderstanding the meaning of the two-part phrase "Baseball, huh? That tracks", and mistakenly using "Baseball, huh?" in place of "That tracks". The phrase has been transformed by the internet hive-mind into a "The Waffle House Has Found Its New Host" type phrase, where it's spread is far beyond the original source to the point it now has little association. It has become an internet phenomenon larger than what it was originally imagined to be.
"My brother got hit in the parking lot by an elderly Asian lady"
"Baseball, huh?"
"Why do you keep ignoring me?"
"Baseball, huh?"
"Baseball, huh?"
"Why do you keep ignoring me?"
"Baseball, huh?"
by AlJokesFan April 1, 2025

by Udcbaseball April 21, 2021

A game for softcocks
by Tat master May 26, 2019

Johnny: Did you hear that Bruce is going to be free climbing the Grand Canyon upside down and blindfolded, all the while having a rattlesnake coiled around his penis!?
Gregor: well, he sure is playing baseball with an ax and a grenade.
Gregor: well, he sure is playing baseball with an ax and a grenade.
by The Earl of Sandwiches May 9, 2018
