Earned Run Average

In baseball statistics, earned run average (denoted by ERA) is the mean of earned runs given up by a pitcher per nine innings pitched. It is determined by multiplying the number of earned runs allowed by nine and dividing by the number of innings pitched. Henry Chadwick is credited with first devising the statistic. It caught on as a measure of pitching effectiveness after relief pitching came into vogue in the 1900s. Prior to the 1900s—and, in fact, for many years afterward—every pitcher was expected to pitch a complete game. After pitchers like Otis Crandall and Charlie Hall made names for themselves as relief specialists, gauging a pitcher's effectiveness became more difficult using the traditional method of tabulating wins and losses. The National League first kept official earned run average statistics in 1912 (the statistic was called Heydler's Statistic for a while, after then-NL secretary John Heydler), with the American League following suit afterward. Modern-day baseball encyclopedias give ERAs for earlier years, of course, but these were computed after the fact. Negro League pitchers are often rated by RA, or total runs allowed, since the statistics available for Negro League games did not always distinguish between earned and unearned runs. As with batting average, the value of a good ERA varies from year to year. In the 1910s, a good ERA was below 2.00 (two earned runs allowed per nine innings). In the late 1920s and 1930s, as might be expected, a good ERA was below 4.00; only a pitcher of the caliber of Dazzy Vance or Lefty Grove would post an ERA under 3.00 consistently during those years. In the 1960s, sub-2.00 ERAs returned. Today, an ERA under 4.00 is again considered exceptional, although pitchers like Pedro Martinez and Greg Maddux stand out as Grove and Vance did in their day. The all-time single-season record for lowest ERA in a season is 0.86, set by Tim Keefe in 1880. The modern record is 1.12, set by Bob Gibson in 1968. The lowest single-season ERA of an active pitcher is 1.56, achieved by Greg Maddux in 1994. The career record is 1.82, held by Ed Walsh, and the active player with the lowest career ERA is Pedro Martinez with an ERA of 2.71 through the 2004 season. In modern baseball, an ERA under 2.00 is considered exceptional and is rare. An ERA between 2.00 and 3.00 is also considered great and is only achieved by the best pitchers in the league. ERA between 3.00 and 4.00 is above-average. An ERA between 4.00 and 5.00 is average; the majority of pitchers have an ERA in this range. An ERA above 5.00 is generally considered below-average, and a pitcher with an ERA above 6.00 for a prolonged period of time is usually in danger of losing his job. It can be misleading to judge relief pitchers solely on their ERA because a pitcher is responsible only for the runs scored by batters who reach base off him. If a relief pitcher enters the game with his team leading by one run, 2 outs in the inning, and the bases loaded, then gives up a single which scores two runs, he is not charged with those runs. If he retires the next batter, his ERA for that game would be 0.00 despite having surrendered the lead. ERA taken by itself can also be misleading for starting pitchers, though not to the extent seen with relief pitchers. ERA is affected to some degree by the park in which a pitcher's team plays half its games. For an extreme example, pitchers for the Colorado Rockies face a double problem. The high altitude of Denver causes fly balls to travel up to 10% farther than at sea level and reduces the ability of pitchers to throw effective breaking balls. Also, Coors Field has fences that are not long enough to compensate for the increased fly-ball distance at Denver, plus a relatively small amount of foul territory.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
onkaparinga river national park
witjira national park
john otway
ben lomond national park
rich garcs
cradle mountain lake st clair national park
douglas apsley national park
franklin gordon wild rivers national park
freycinet national park
hartz mountains national park
kent group national park
maria island national park
mole creek karst national park
mount field national park
mount william national park
narawntapu national park
rocky cape national park
savage river national park
south bruny national park
southwest national park
strzelecki national park
tasman national park
walls of jerusalem national park
video game publisher
the family man
alberti bass
renate knast
joschka fischer
molar (tooth)
accretion disc
freiburg
contract bridge playing technique
alfred national park
national nature reserves in england
degenerate distribution
icelandic
canadian dollar
alohanet
national nature reserves in norfolk
matiyasevich's theorem
ant broads & marshes nnr
evanston
linear independence
list of cities in north korea