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Error (baseball)




The term ''error'' can also refer to the Play in which an error was committed.

An error does not count as a Hit and the batter will not be credited for any RBIs when runs are scored—unless, in the scorer's judgment, the batter would have reached first base safely but one or more of the additional base(s) reached was the result of the fielder's mistake. In that case, the play will be scored both as a hit (for the number of bases the fielders should have limited the batter to) ''and'' an error .

Passed Ball s and Wild Pitch es are separate statistical categories and are not scored as errors.


STATISTICAL SIGNIFICANCE


Traditionally, the number of errors was a statistic used to quantify the skill of a fielder. However, fans and analysts have questioned the usefulness and significance of such a practice. The error has some flaws as a metric for fielding skill. Notably, mental misjudgments, such as failure to cover a base, are not considered errors.

A more subtle, though more significant objection to the error, as Sabermetricians have noted, is more conceptual—in order for a fielder to be charged with an error, he must have done something right by being in the correct place to be able to attempt the play. A poor fielder may "avoid" many errors simply by being unable to reach batted or thrown balls that a better fielder could successfully reach. Thus, it is possible that a poor fielder will have fewer errors than an otherwise better fielder.

In recent times, official scorers have recognized this; they will usually take a fielder's supposed "extraordinary" effort or positioning into account when judging whether the play should have been successful given ordinary effort.