Indiana prisoner Dennis W. Christopher brought this lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging as relevant here that seven employees of Westville Correctional Facility violated the Eighth Amendment by failing to correct what he refers to as a “protrusive lip” on the prison softball field. He claims that the “lip” caused a ball to bounce up and hit him in the face, permanently injuring his right eye. The district court dismissed Christopher’s complaint prior to service, see 28 U.S.C. § 1915A, for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. Christopher appeals, and we affirm.
Christopher’s injury occurred in July 2000 during an intramural softball game at Westville. Playing second base, Christopher had backed onto the outfield grass between first and second base when a groundball was hit his way. As he bent to catch it, the ball hit what Christopher describes as a “protrusive lip” about five inches high at the edge of the infield. The lip caused the ball to take a bad hop and spring up unexpectedly into Christopher’s right eye. As a result, Christopher’s pupil is now permanently dilated, a condition that not only affects his appearance but also causes severe headaches and makes reading difficult. The condition also increases Christopher’s chances of developing glaucoma or tumors in that eye and makes it overly sensitive to light.
Although Christopher did not know about the lip, he alleges that the defendants did because another inmate had previously been injured in precisely the same way. That time a softball hit the same lip and bounced up into the other inmate’s face, opening a gash through his eyebrow that required four stitches. Christopher alleges that the defendants easily could have repaired the hazardous lip after the *881 first injury but neither fixed the defect nor warned him of its existence.
Christopher claims in his lawsuit that the failure to repair the field or at least warn him of its defective condition constituted deliberate indifference to his right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. He also asserted a negligence claim under Indiana law. In dismissing the constitutional claim, the district court reasoned that the defendants had no control over when and where a softball would bounce and thus could not have been deliberately indifferent. The court then declined to exercise its supplemental jurisdiction over Christopher’s negligence claim.
I. Analysis
On appeal Christopher presses only his Eighth Amendment claim, arguing that he sufficiently stated a claim based on the defendants’ deliberate indifference to the hazard created by the five-inch lip on the softball field. We review the district court’s § 1915A dismissal de novo and will affirm if it appears beyond doubt that no set of facts can sustain Christopher’s claim for relief.
Wynn v. Southward,
The defendants
1
attack Christopher’s complaint as insufficient because he failed to “allege facts” demonstrating that they violated the Eighth Amendment through their deliberate indifference to his health and safety. But as we have said repeatedly, fact pleading is not necessary to state a claim for relief.
See, e.g., Thomson v. Washington,
By explaining the nature of his claim and the basic events underlying it, Christopher satisfied the technical requirements of Rule 8, but that does not immunize his complaint against dismissal under § 1915A.
See Kirksey v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.,
The Eighth Amendment’s proscription against cruel and unusual punishment protects prisoners from the “unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain” by the state.
Hudson v. McMillian,
It is at the objective stage of the inquiry that Christopher’s complaint fails. Even if the defendants knew about the field condition (we assume at this stage that they did) and purposefully ignored it, Christopher would not be entitled to relief. A “protrusive lip” on a softball field, even if hazardous when a ball hits it in a certain way, does not amount to a condition objectively serious enough to implicate the Eighth Amendment. Such “lips” where the infield joins the outfield doubtless exist on subpar fields across- the country. To say that “exposure” to such a field could violate the Eighth Amendment would be to imply that prison officials violate the Eighth Amendment by letting inmates play sports at all, because the risk of injury, even serious injury, is inherent.
Cf. James v. Hillerich & Bradsby Co.,
An “objectively ‘sufficiently serious’ ” risk,
see Farmer,
Moreover, Christopher himself explains in his complaint that the defendants “invited” him to play softball — an invitation he accepted voluntarily. That Christopher chose to play further derails his theory that prison officials failed to protect him from harm. A prison official’s duty to protect an inmate from harm arises because the state has placed him “under a regime that incapacitates [him] to exercise
*883
ordinary responsibility for his own welfare.”
See County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
II. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the district court’s judgment dismissing Christopher’s complaint for failure to state a claim.
Notes
. Although Christopher's amended complaint names seven defendants in both their official and individual capacities, his allegations of personal involvement are limited to Karl Gast (or Gatz), Richard Amie, and Al Pilarski, whom he specifically claims knew about the allegedly hazardous field condition. We have thus assumed that he seeks to proceed only against those three in their individual capacities.
See, e.g., Palmer v. Marion County,
