He will also receive an RBI if a runner scores from his sacrifice fly or sacrifice bunt. As an example, if someone hits a home run with two runners on base, the batter would get three RBIs since both baserunners as well as the batter would score. RBI are sometimes referred to in slang , as ribbies or ribs , by interchanging the B and I , or as steaks as in ' rib eye steaks '. RBI are one of three categories composing baseball's batting triple crown , the other two being batting average and home runs.
In turn, a teammate reaches home to score a run. Upon knowing what RBI is, you might still have some questions in mind. For instance, is a wild pitch an RBI? Find out the answers to these questions as you continue reading the article. The official MLB definition of this statistic explains it as when a player is credited with an RBI when his plate appearance led to a run being scored. Most commonly, RBIs are earned for hits that score a run or an out.
However, players can also get them for walks or hits by pitch. According to Rule 9. A run batted in is a statistic credited to a batter whose action at bat causes one or more runs to score, as set forth in this Rule 9. Shot : Another name for a home run or hard-hit ball. Rake A term for a batter who's pretty adept at hitting the ball to most if not all parts of the field.
Knocks: Hard hits or extra base hit s, not necessarily producing RBIs or referring to a specific type of hit. There have only been 17 Triple Crown winners in baseball history.
Grand slam home run. Note hit location is still in field. Any number usually no more than four of fielders may be involved but a solo triple play is possible, albeit very very rare. Range Factor RF - Range Factor is another "modern statistic", and is calculated by the number of Putouts and Assists combined, divided by the number of innings played by the player. It is therefore claimed to be a measure of how frequently the player fields the ball or perhaps how frequently it's hit in his direction!
Passed Balls PB - The number of "passed balls" allowed by a catcher a pitch he should have caught, but fumbled and allowed base runners to advance. Pitching Statistics Games G - The number of games in which the pitcher has appeared. Games Started GS - The number of games the pitcher started. Complete Games CG - The number of complete games a starter has pitched a game he started and finished, and which went for at least nine innings.
Games Finished GF - The number of games in which the pitcher finished the game i. Innings Pitched IP - The number of innings pitched. A pitcher is credited with a third of an inning when he gets one hitter out. It is possible for a pitcher to play for "zero" innings, e.
Hits H - The number of base hits given up by the pitcher. Runs R - The number of runs scored off the pitcher, including those due to errors by the fielding team. Note that when a pitcher is lifted from the game he retains responsibility for any runs that may be scored by base-runners left behind by him when he was replaced or indeed any runners who get on base as a consequence of "fielder's choices" erasing runners left by him but allowing a new hitter to reach base , so if he leaves the game with a runner on second base, and that runner subsequently scores, the run is "charged" to the original pitcher because he put him there.
Earned Runs ER - The number of "earned" runs scored off the pitcher, which do not include runs which are scored as a result of a fielding error by the pitcher's team. Whether a run is earned or not is quite complicated. If a runner got on base because of an error, or if the inning is only still in progress because of an error i. Note also that a pitcher can be responsible for the fielding error himself, and the run still remains "unearned".
Home Runs HR - The number of home runs scored off the pitcher. Bases on Balls BB - The number of "bases on balls" walks issued by the pitcher. This does not include Intentional Bases on Balls where the manager effectively instructs the pitcher to walk a batter for tactical reasons. Strikeouts SO - The number of hitters "struck out" by the pitcher. Wild Pitches WP - The number of "wild pitches" thrown by the pitcher which got by the catcher, allowing base runners to advance, and determined by the Official Scorer to be the pitcher's fault, not the catcher's.
Balks Bk - The number of "balks" called against the pitcher, whereby he illegally interrupts his throwing motion and the runners are awarded an extra base.
A win is credited to a starting pitcher if he held the lead when he left the game and his team never subsequently lost the lead, or to the pitcher who was the "pitcher of record" when the winning run was scored the last pitcher who got the last out when his team scored the winning run.
Example 1: a starter pitches six innings and leaves with a lead. His team extend the lead to in the eighth but the opposition score two runs in the ninth so the game finishes The starter is awarded the win because his team always led once he left the game.
Example 2: a starter pitches six innings and leaves with a lead. The opposition tie the game at in the seventh, and his team extend the lead to in the eighth and the game finishes
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