@farmerman,
Quote:The second thing to be aware of is the expression, "earned run." An earned run is any run that is scored due to the pitcher's pitching. If a runner reaches base because of a hit, a walk, or getting hit by a pitch, if that runner reaches home, that counts as an earned run. If a runner is on third and reaches home on a wild pitch, that counts as an earned run. What does NOT count as an earned run is any hitter who reaches base on an error by a fielder. If the shortstop bobbles the ball and the hitter reaches first when it would have been an out, that runner does NOT count in the pitcher's ERA. It is entirely possible (though unlikely) for a pitcher to lose a 3-0 game and finish with an ERA for the game of 0 if the only runners to score reached base on fielding errors. So be careful to eliminate those scores from your pitcher's ERA.
That's not entirely accurate. A run is unearned if the runner either reaches base by way of an error (or catcher's interference) or if the runner, having reached base by a hit, walk, or hit batsman, scores and the scorer determines that he wouldn't have scored but for an error (or interference or a passed ball). So, for instance, a batter walks with two outs. The next batter hits a ball that a fielder misplays for an error, allowing the batter to reach base and the runner to advance. The next batter hits a home run. All three runs are unearned, because the inning should have ended when the fielder made the error. Because of the error, however, the inning continued, so the runs are unearned. See
Rule 10.16 of the Official Rules of Baseball.