Baseball Rules · Pitching · Mound Equipment

What Is a Rosin Bag in Baseball? — Everything You Need to Know

The small white bag on the back of the pitcher's mound is one of the most overlooked pieces of equipment in baseball. Here's what it is, why it matters, and the surprisingly complex rules around using it.
Quick Answer
A rosin bag is a small cloth sack filled with dried pine resin powder that pitchers use to dry their hands and improve grip.

It's the only substance MLB officially allows pitchers to use on the mound. Rosin absorbs moisture from the hands, improving grip on the baseball without adding tackiness — unlike pine tar or spider tack, which are illegal for pitchers. Every MLB game has a rosin bag placed at the back of the pitcher's mound by the umpire before play begins.

Baseball rosin bag on the pitcher's mound

What Is Rosin and Why Do Pitchers Use It?

Rosin is a dry powder made from the resin of pine or fir trees. During spring, manufacturers extract sap from the trees, boil it to remove turpentine, and grind the remaining dense resin into a fine powder. The result is a substance that is dry to the touch but creates a slightly tacky surface when it contacts moisture — like the sweat on a pitcher's hands during a summer game.

When a pitcher squeezes or taps the rosin bag, a small cloud of powder coats their hands. As the powder mixes with any moisture on the skin, it creates a drier, slightly more adhesive surface that improves how the fingers grip the baseball. The key distinction is that rosin absorbs and dries moisture rather than adding a sticky foreign substance — which is why it's the only grip aid MLB officially permits pitchers to use.

Why Does Grip Matter So Much for Pitching?

This is the question most rosin bag articles never address — and it's the most important one. A pitcher's ability to throw consistent, precise breaking balls, changeups, and four-seam fastballs depends almost entirely on how consistently they can apply pressure with their fingers at release. When hands are sweaty, the ball slips slightly off the fingertips at a different point each time — producing inconsistent release angles, less spin, and less precise location.

Statcast data has shown that spin rate — the number of rotations per minute a ball completes in flight — directly affects pitch movement. A curveball thrown with a stable, dry grip produces more consistent spin axis and therefore more consistent break than the same pitch thrown with sweaty hands. A pitcher who loses feel for the ball on a hot July afternoon is losing movement and command simultaneously. The rosin bag addresses both problems by eliminating the moisture variable.

Rosin for position players and hitters — not just pitchers

While pitchers are the primary users, rosin bags serve a different but equally valid purpose for hitters and position players. Hitters apply rosin to their hands before stepping in to cut through sweat and humidity, improving bat control through the swing. Some players apply it over their batting gloves for additional grip. Catchers use it to ensure a secure grip on the glove during blocking and receiving. For hitters, rosin pairs naturally with pine tar on the bat handle — the rosin dries the hands, the pine tar provides the tackiness for the bat. The combination has been standard practice for decades.

How to Use a Rosin Bag Correctly

There's more technique to rosin bag use than most fans realize — pitchers have developed individual routines that reflect different approaches to grip.

Technique How It Works Best For
Palm squeeze and rub Squeeze the bag firmly in the palm, then rub both hands together to distribute the powder evenly General moisture control across the full hand
Fingertip tap Tap the bag lightly on each fingertip individually — more precise application to the grip surface Pitchers who need precise fingertip feel for breaking balls
Lick and apply Some pitchers lick their fingers before applying rosin, believing the moisture helps the powder bond better to the skin Pitchers who need the powder to adhere rather than just dust the hand
Bag in pocket When it's raining, the umpire may allow the pitcher to carry the rosin bag in their pocket to keep it dry Wet weather situations at the umpire's discretion

MLB Rules on the Rosin Bag — Complete Breakdown

The rules around rosin bags are more specific than most people realize — and violating them has led to ejections and suspensions. Here is every current MLB rule governing rosin bag use:

Only the umpire may place the official rosin bag on the back of the mound before each game
The pitcher may only use rosin on their hands — fingers and palms
If it's raining, the pitcher may place the rosin bag in their pocket at the umpire's discretion
A batted ball that hits the rosin bag is still in play — it is considered part of the field like any natural obstacle
Umpires must review the rosin bag and game balls before each game
The pitcher cannot apply rosin directly to the baseball
The pitcher cannot use the rosin bag on their glove
The pitcher cannot use the rosin bag on their uniform
The pitcher may not combine rosin with any other substance — including sunscreen — as this creates illegal tackiness
Pitchers cannot use sunscreen during night games in closed-roof parks
⚠️Pitchers can only use the rosin bag when time is called and they step off the mound rubber
⚠️Violation results in immediate ejection and a 10-game suspension for use of a foreign substance

The sunscreen + rosin combination — why it's banned

For years before the 2021 crackdown, pitchers combined sunscreen with rosin on their skin — sunscreen is sticky, rosin is dry, and together they create a tackiness that meaningfully improves grip beyond what rosin alone provides. This combination was widespread and largely overlooked until Statcast spin rate data showed suspicious spikes across the league. MLB's 2021 enforcement rules explicitly prohibited the combination. Max Scherzer's 2023 ejection came amid questions about whether his unusual hand tackiness was from sweat-plus-rosin alone or a violation.

The MLB Exclusive Rosin Supplier — Pelican Bat Wax

One of the least-known facts about the rosin bag crackdown: MLB no longer allows teams to source their own rosin bags. Previously teams could buy rosin from any supplier with minimal oversight. After the foreign substance controversies, MLB partnered with Pelican Bat Wax — a small San Francisco-based company — as the exclusive rosin bag supplier for all 30 MLB teams. This means every rosin bag used in a major league game comes from the same source, with standardized composition that cannot be altered or supplemented.

History of the Rosin Bag in Baseball

The rosin bag's history in baseball stretches back over a century and is more contentious than its current mundane presence on the mound suggests. Before rosin bags existed, pitchers improvised — using dirt, sweat, rubbing balls on their uniforms, or keeping loose rosin powder in their pockets. The lack of standardization made it difficult for umpires to distinguish legitimate grip aids from foreign substances.

Major League Baseball began regulating foreign substances seriously in 1919, which paradoxically complicated the rosin situation — rosin was legal but its use was inconsistent. The National League formally reintroduced standardized rosin bags in 1925; the American League followed in 1931. From then through the early 2020s, rosin bags occupied a quiet, uncontroversial place in the game's ecosystem until the spider tack era changed everything.


Rosin vs. Other Grip Substances — What's Legal?

Substance Legal for Pitchers? Effect on Grip Notes
Rosin ✅ Yes — only approved substance Dries moisture, slight tackiness Official MLB standard — exclusively from Pelican Bat Wax
Pine tar ❌ No Adds sticky surface that increases spin rate Legal for hitters on bat handle (18" rule), illegal for pitchers
Spider tack ❌ No Extreme tackiness, dramatically increases spin rate Industrial adhesive — triggered 2021 enforcement crackdown
Sunscreen ❌ No (when combined with rosin) Sunscreen + rosin = illegal tackiness Sunscreen alone isn't banned, but combining with rosin is
Grip stick / Firm Grip ❌ No Commercial sticky grip spray Used widely before 2021 enforcement, now illegal on mound
Sweat + rosin ✅ Yes Natural moisture + rosin = acceptable The Scherzer controversy questioned where this line sits

Recent Rosin Controversies

Max Scherzer
2023 · New York Mets
In a game between the Mets and Dodgers, Scherzer was ejected after umpires found his hand to be unusually sticky. Scherzer insisted he had only used sweat and rosin — a combination that is technically legal — but the tackiness exceeded what umpires considered normal for that combination. The incident highlighted the enforcement grey zone: rosin plus natural sweat is legal, but determining exactly where that line sits is subjective. Scherzer's ejection sparked significant debate about whether the rules were being applied consistently across the league.
Domingo Germán
Minnesota Twins vs. New York Yankees
Umpire James Hoye noticed excess rosin on Germán's hands and asked him to clean them. Despite Germán's compliance, the tackiness remained — suggesting a combination of rosin with another substance rather than rosin alone. Germán was not ejected, but Twins manager Rocco Baldelli was, after publicly expressing his disagreement with the umpire's decision. The incident illustrated how inconsistent enforcement can be and how the residual tackiness test — rather than direct observation of rule-breaking — is the primary tool umpires use.
Giovanny Gallegos
St. Louis Cardinals
During a game, Gallegos was approached by umpires after applying rosin to his left arm rather than his hands. The rules clearly state rosin may only be applied to the hands — applying it to other body parts, even non-throwing surfaces, triggers an inspection. Umpires wiped down Gallegos' arm. The incident was minor but illustrated how broadly the rules are applied: rosin on the arm, even if not transferred to the ball, is still a violation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a rosin bag used for in baseball?
A rosin bag is used by pitchers to dry their hands and improve grip on the baseball. The powder absorbs moisture from the hands, creating a slightly tacky dry surface that helps pitchers maintain consistent finger pressure at release — which directly affects spin rate, pitch movement, and command. It's the only substance MLB officially allows pitchers to use on the mound.
Is the rosin bag legal in baseball?
Yes — rosin is the only substance officially permitted for pitchers to use on the mound. All other grip aids — pine tar, spider tack, sunscreen mixed with rosin, grip spray — are illegal for pitchers and result in ejection and a 10-game suspension. Rosin can only be applied to the hands, not the glove, uniform, or baseball directly.
What happens if a batted ball hits the rosin bag?
The ball is still in play. The rosin bag is considered part of the field — like a pebble or any other natural obstacle on the playing surface. This is why pitchers are careful to keep the bag out of the path of ground balls hit across the mound. A deflection off the rosin bag is a live ball situation.
Is rosin tacky or dry?
Dry on its own — but rosin becomes slightly tacky when it contacts moisture. When the dry powder mixes with sweat on a pitcher's hands, it creates a drier, slightly adhesive surface. This is different from substances like pine tar or spider tack, which are inherently sticky. Rosin alone does not add significant tackiness — it primarily dries moisture to restore grip feel.
Can position players use rosin bags?
Yes — while the rosin bag on the mound is specifically for pitchers, position players can apply rosin to their hands for grip improvement. Hitters commonly use it before at-bats to cut through hand sweat, either directly or over batting gloves. Catchers use it for glove grip. The restrictions governing pitchers on the mound don't apply to position players using rosin in the dugout or field.
What is the rosin bag made of?
The bag is a small canvas or cloth pouch filled with rosin powder — a dry substance made by extracting sap from pine or fir trees, boiling it to remove turpentine, and grinding the remaining dense resin into a fine powder. Since 2021, MLB has mandated that all teams use rosin bags exclusively from Pelican Bat Wax, a San Francisco-based company designated as the league's official sole supplier.
Why did MLB change the rosin bag rules?
The 2021 enforcement crackdown came after Statcast data revealed widespread spin rate spikes across the league — the result of pitchers using tacky substances like spider tack that dramatically improved grip beyond what rosin provides. The rules now prohibit any substance except rosin, mandate regular umpire inspections, place humidors in all 30 ballparks to standardize ball moisture, and require all teams to use the same MLB-approved rosin supplier. The changes were specifically designed to prevent pitchers from using substances that gave them unfair spin rate advantages at the expense of hitting performance.

The bottom line

The rosin bag is the simplest piece of equipment on the pitcher's mound and one of the most regulated. It's the only substance MLB officially allows for grip — dry powder that absorbs moisture without adding tackiness. The 2021 enforcement crackdown turned a forgettable accessory into a centerpiece of baseball's ongoing foreign substance debate. Pelican Bat Wax now exclusively supplies every MLB team. Umpires check for violations multiple times per game.

For young pitchers: rosin is your friend in hot, humid games. Use it on your hands, not your glove or uniform, and develop the habit early so it becomes a natural part of your between-pitch routine.

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