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ERA calculation is:
Earned runs allowed, multiplied by 9, divided by innings pitched (ie. .333, .666, 1) However, if a pitcher has not recorded an out all season, how would his/her ERA be calculated?

2007-03-03 14:27:22 · 7 answers · asked by kraze4wave 1 in Sports Baseball

7 answers

At the beginning of the season, such an ERA would be undefined because anything divided by 0 is undefined.

Some newspapers may put in 0.1 innings such that a number can be calculated. That 0.1 is usually deducted once that pitcher registers an out.

2007-03-03 14:31:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i'm extra in touch concerning to the 14 innings, i've got under no circumstances seen a tumbler circulate that long, however the .2 innings is trouble-free, if a splash counter intuitive. The "factors" of an inning communicate with the style of outs recorded via the pitcher in a partial inning. If the pitcher is faraway from the activity with a million out, then the pitcher pitched X.a million innings.

2016-12-14 10:03:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

.1 is one out, .2 is two outs, the rest is easy. if he doesnt rocord an out all u do is add the ER to his er's for the year and dont add any innings. divid do math. Look at nolan ryans 1st year i tihnk, era like 109 or sumcrap.

2007-03-03 14:47:35 · answer #3 · answered by gitusumrb 1 · 0 0

In the official MLB rule book, such an ERA is defined as "infinite" (they use the sideways figure 8 symbol that Yahoo! won't let me type in here).

2007-03-03 23:50:43 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

his ERA would be infinity..this happened a year ago I believ when Braden Looper gave up a game-winning homer before recording an out, giving fantasy owner's a headache and an era that read
"INF"

2007-03-03 14:31:32 · answer #5 · answered by ryboyin 4 · 0 0

It doesn't matter whether he's ever recorded an out in a particular inning.
If he's left the game with runners, they count against his e.r.a.
Once the inning is over or those runners are in, they count against his e.r.a for that 1 inning.

2007-03-03 14:34:25 · answer #6 · answered by mantle two 4 · 0 2

undefined/infinate, depends on which scoring service you get, but with most places its scored as infinate (INF)

2007-03-03 15:06:48 · answer #7 · answered by Spearfish 5 · 2 0

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