What is a IP in baseball?

Definition. Innings pitched measures the number of innings a pitcher remains in a game. Because there are three outs in an inning, each out recorded represents one-third of an inning pitched.
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What is a good IP for baseball?

Pitchers with the game's best P/IP rate typically average fewer than 15 pitches per inning. A starting pitcher with those numbers would be able to go seven innings on fewer than 105 pitches.
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What is IP and K in baseball?

Innings Pitched (IP) Loss (L) Number of Pitches (NP) Pickoff (PK) Quality Start (QS)
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How many IP Do you need to get a win in baseball?

Definition. A pitcher receives a win when he is the pitcher of record when his team takes the lead for good -- with a couple rare exceptions. First, a starting pitcher must pitch at least five innings (in a traditional game of nine innings or longer) to qualify for the win.
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Can a pitcher get a win and a save?

A pitcher cannot receive a save and a win in the same game. A relief pitcher recording a save must preserve his team's lead while doing one of the following: Enter the game with a lead of no more than three runs and pitch at least one inning.
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Baseball Stats 101: ERA, FIP, WHIP Explained



What is k9 in baseball?

K/9 rate measures how many strikeouts a pitcher averages for every nine innings pitched. It is determined by dividing his strikeout total by his innings pitched total and multiplying the result by nine.
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Why is strikeout called AK?

A “K” is used to refer to a strikeout in baseball because the letter “S” was already used to score a sacrifice. So Henry Chadwick, the inventor of the box score, began using the letter “K” in the 1860s because it is the last letter of “struck”, which was the common term for a strikeout at the time.
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What is CB in baseball?

Collegiate Baseball. Sport, Collegiate, College.
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What is a good high school WHIP?

Usually, an average WHIP is around 1.30, while a good WHIP is under 1.10, and an elite WHIP is below 1. A WHIP over 1.50 is generally considered poor.
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What does H mean in pitching?

A hold occurs when a relief pitcher enters the game in a save situation and maintains his team's lead for the next relief pitcher, while recording at least one out.
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How many pitches should you throw per inning?

The math on that works out to be 15 pitches per inning – which is generally considered to be the average number of pitches thrown per inning. Depending on where at in the season, that pitcher may go beyond a 100-110 pitch count.
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Is a 0.00 ERA good?

In 21st century baseball, an ERA below 4.00 is considered good, and anything below 3.00 is great. An ERA below 2.00 is rare and signifies an exceptional pitcher. Anything above 5.00 is terrible, and generally, pitchers with that ERA either pitch during blow-out games or get sent to the minor leagues.
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How many pitchers pitched 3000 innings?

In Major League Baseball (MLB), the 3,000 strikeout club is the group of 19 pitchers who have struck out 3,000 or more batters in their careers.
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Who pitched the longest?

Nolan Ryan, 27 seasons

By today's standards, Nolan Ryan's 27 seasons in the big leagues are nothing short of miraculous. He has the longest MLB career and did so as a power pitcher who was routinely throwing over 100 mph during the prime of his career.
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Why is a walk BB?

Definition. A walk (or base on balls) occurs when a pitcher throws four pitches out of the strike zone, none of which are swung at by the hitter. After refraining from swinging at four pitches out of the zone, the batter is awarded first base. In the scorebook, a walk is denoted by the letters BB.
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What is the rarest hit in baseball?

For more than fifty years after the founding of the major leagues, the home run was the rarest hit, followed by the triple, double, and single. The logic behind this was obvious: The farther a batter struck the ball, the more bases he could reach.
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Why are there 4 balls and 3 strikes?

That created a bit of a pace problem, so in 1858, called strikes were implemented with one caveat: batters would receive one "warning" call for the first hittable pitch they let pass. So, effectively, it would require four strikes to make an out. Even with the called strikes, the game was still slow.
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What does bb9 mean in baseball?

In baseball statistics, bases on balls per nine innings pitched (BB/9IP or BB/9) or walks per nine innings (denoted by W/9) is the average number of bases on balls, (or walks) given up by a pitcher per nine innings pitched.
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What does WHIP mean in baseball?

Walks And Hits Per Inning Pitched (WHIP) | Glossary | MLB.com.
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What is bb9 in MLB The Show?

Walks Per Nine Innings (BB/9)
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What is the longest save in MLB history?

On September 3, 2002, Benoit recorded the longest save in major league history, pitching 7 innings in relief of Todd Van Poppel, who earned the win after replacing Aaron Myette, who was ejected after throwing only two pitches.
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Can a pitcher get two blown saves?

A reliever cannot blow multiple saves in a game unless he has multiple save opportunities, a situation only possible if the reliever temporarily switches to another defensive position, then returns to pitching.
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Can a pitcher have two blown saves in the same game?

Here are the times in 2010 when one team has blown more than 1 save in the same game. Hideki Okajima and Jonathan Papelbon did it last night for the Red Sox. Generated 6/25/2010. The Indians also just did it against the Phillies.
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