How are pitchers E.R.A calculated?
Question:What is the equation for computing this?
Answers:
Should Arod Stay On The Yankees?
Runs x 9 / Innings Pitched(2 Runs) x (9) / (.67) = 26.87 E.R.A.
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What baseball player whose last name begins with e has the most career home runs?
take the amount of earned runs ( runs not given up by errors) and divide them by 9 innings.ERA is the average amount of runs given up over 9 innings...the lower the ERA the betterCan anyone tell me why pitchers were batting today at the chicago white sox and cubs game?
Per 9 innings.It is a season, or extended period of time because if a pitcher comes in, allows 3 runs without his team making an out an then gets pulled from the game, he does not receive have an ERA for the game (must record an out. In his next outing, he gets 3 out with giving up a run, his ERA is 27.00 (3 runs * 9 (he played 1/9th of a game all though he was in the game for 2 outings, he recorded 3 outs).
His ERA will move up down or stay stagnet as time passes.
What exactly is an infield fly?
earned runs X 9 divided by innings pitched. for example; burnnett gives up 6 EARNED runs in 3 innings today. 6 X 9/ 3 = 54/3 = era of 18.aye aye aye...there are lots or wrong answers here fella's and fellowette's.
EARNED RUNS times NINE divided by INNINGS PITCHED
this aint calculus, thank gawd!
relief pitcher example 2 X 9/ .66 = 27.3
one out in a inning = .33
two outs "" "" = .66
if a pitcher goes 8 innings and gets one out in 9th, innings pitched = 8.33. gets two outs in the 9th, 8.66. 3 outs, nine innings pitched.
# OF INNINGS PITCHED DIVIDED INTO NINE TIMES THE NUMBER OF EARNED RUNS GIVEN UP...
__________9_________ X # EARNED
# OF INNINGS PITCHED GIVEN UP
Do Japanese Players have more respect for the game than American Players?
27...2 ER in 2/3 inning = 3 runs/inning. This means that per nine innings, he gave up 27 runs. Therefore, his ERA for this game only would be 27.00An overall equation is (ER/IP)*9
Fellow Yankee Fans, what do you think?
Earned Run Average (ERA): Multiply the total number of earned runs by nine, and divide the results by the total innings pitched.Example:
Randy Johnson has allowed 67 runs in 220 innings.
Multiply 67 by 9: 67x9=603. Divide 603 by 220 (his innings pitched): 603/220=2.74 -- which is his ERA
ERA (drop the periods, it's an acronym and acronyms don't include periods).
Earned runs/innings pitched *9
It's a way of "normalizing" the earned runs allowed by all pitchers.
Did the relief pitcher give up runners that he put on base, or runners inherited by a previous pitcher? If they were runners that he put on base, they affect his ERA. If they were inherited runners, they are charged to the pitcher who put them on base.
That's why a better measure for relief pitchers in inherited runners allowed. That simply measures the number of other pitchers' runners whom he allowed to score, and divided it by the total number of runners he inherited. Another good measure for a relief pitcher is how often he retires the first batter that he faces. This one, however, includes coming into the game with no one on base.
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