An ERA between 2.00 and 3.00 is also considered excellent and is only achieved by the best pitchers in the league. An 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.
In baseball statistics, earned run average (ERA) is the average of earned runs allowed by a pitcher per nine innings pitched (i.e. the traditional length of a game). It is determined by dividing the number of earned runs allowed by the number of innings pitched and multiplying by nine. Thus, a lower ERA is better.
1.816Ed Walsh holds the MLB earned run average record with a 1.816.List.
Rank | Player | ERA |
---|---|---|
1 | Ed Walsh * | 1.816 |
2 | Addie Joss * | 1.887 |
3 | Jim Devlin | 1.896 |
4 | Jack Pfiester | 2.024 |
The lowest single-season ERA in league history was posted by Tim Keefe, whose 0.86 ERA in 105 innings pitched for the National League’s Troy Trojans in 1880 led his closest competitor by . 52 runs. In the American League, Dutch Leonard’s 0.96 ERA is a single-season record.
Ed Walsh+Career Leaders & Records for Earned Run Average
Rank | Player (yrs, age) | Earned Run Average |
---|---|---|
1. | Ed Walsh+ (14) | 1.816 |
2. | Addie Joss+ (9) | 1.887 |
3. | Jim Devlin (5) | 1.896 |
4. | Jack Pfiester (8) | 2.024 |
J. VerlanderHOUMLB Stat Leaders 2022
EARNED RUN AVERAGE | ERA |
---|---|
1 J. VerlanderHOU | 1.82 |
2 D. CeaseCHW | 2.06 |
3 J. UriasLAD | 2.25 |
4 A. ManoahTOR | 2.31 |
WHIP reflects a pitcher’s propensity for allowing batters to reach base, therefore a lower WHIP indicates better performance. While earned run average (ERA) measures the runs a pitcher gives up, WHIP more directly measures a pitcher’s effectiveness against batters.
In general, an ERA in the range of 4.00 – 5.00 is considered a good career ERA, with the best pitchers being below 2.00. According to Baseball Almanac, Ed Walsh is credited with holding the career record for ERA with 1.82.
The formula for finding ERA is: 9 x earned runs / innings pitched. If a pitcher exits a game with runners on base, any earned runs scored by those runners will count against him. ERA should be an ideal evaluation of pitchers.
When it comes to Major League-caliber pitchers a good WHIP is around 1.00. Anything below 1.00 is outstanding (potential Cy Young worthy) since it demonstrates how dominant a pitcher is.
Rube BresslerThe 10 worst ERAs of all time
Rk | Player | ERA |
---|---|---|
1 | Rube Bressler | 5.20 |
2 | Gene Wright | 4.98 |
3 | Pol Perritt | 5.25 |
4 | Elmer Myers | 4.42 |
A pitcher may change to another position only once during the same inning in NFHS and pro, but only once per game in NCAA (NFHS 3-1-2; NCAA 5-5b, NCAA 9-4e; OBR 5.10d Comment 1).
Completely unofficial and no record books have ever been kept. The following pitchers had no problem with their pitch count, at least for one inning, as they started the inning, threw exactly three pitches and recorded three outs.
Outfielder Ty Cobb, whose career ended in 1928, has the highest batting average in Major League Baseball (MLB) history. He batted . 366 over 24 seasons, mostly with the Detroit Tigers.
The name “live-ball era” comes from the dramatic rise in offensive statistics, a direct result of a series of rule changes (introduced in 1920) that were colloquially said to have made the ball more “lively”. The live-ball era was the era in which baseball regained relevance and exploded in popularity.
40 K’s, 0 walks by Burnes has no precedent
Forty strikeouts and counting. No walks. And a couple of Major League records for Corbin Burnes.
H/9 represents the average number of hits a pitcher allows per nine innings pitched. It is determined by dividing a pitcher’s hits allowed by his innings pitched and multiplying that by nine. It’s a very useful tool for evaluating pitchers, whose goal is to prevent runs, which are usually scored by hits.
A hold is an unofficial statistic that measures the effectiveness of middle relievers. A hold is granted to a relief pitcher who enters a game with his team in the lead in a save situation, and hands over that lead to another reliever without the score having been tied in the interim.
Year | National League | ERA |
---|---|---|
2022 (NL AL) | Julio Urias* (LAD) | 1.84 |
2021 (NL AL) | Corbin Burnes (MIL) | 2.84 |
2020 (NL AL) | Trevor Bauer (CIN) | 1.63 |
2019 (NL AL) | Hyun Jin Ryu* (LAD) | 2.50 |
Indeed, fastball velocity around MLB has increased dramatically. Here’s the average MLB fastball velo by year: 2016: 92.3 mph. 2017: 92.8 mph.
Definition. OPS adds on-base percentage and slugging percentage to get one number that unites the two. It’s meant to combine how well a hitter can reach base, with how well he can hit for average and for power.