Dictionary Definition
unearned adj : not gained by merit or labor or
service; "accepted the unearned rewards that came his ways as well
as the unearned criticism"; "unearned income"; "an unearned run"
[ant: earned]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Not earned
Extensive Definition
In baseball, an earned run is any
run
for which the pitcher
is held accountable (i.e., the run scored as a result of normal
pitching, and not due to a fielding
error or a passed ball).
All others are unearned runs. An error made by the pitcher in
fielding his position is counted the same as an error by any other
player.
Earned runs are specially denoted because of
their use in calculating a pitcher's earned
run average – the number of earned runs allowed per 9 innings
pitched.
To determine whether a run is earned, the
official
scorer must reconstruct the inning as it would have occurred
without the errors (for purposes of this rule, the "errors" also
include passed balls). The benefit of the doubt is always given to
the pitcher in determining which bases would have been reached by
errorless play.
If no errors occur during the inning, all runs
are automatically earned. In a few cases, an error can be rendered
harmless while the inning is still going on. For example, a runner
on first base advances to second on a passed ball. The next batter
walks. Since the runner would now have been at second anyway, the
passed ball no longer has any impact on the earned/unearned
calculation.
A run is counted as unearned when:
- A batter reaches base on an error, and later scores a run in that inning.
- A batter or runner advances one or more bases on an error and scores on a play that would otherwise not have provided the opportunity to score.
- A baserunner scores after the third out would have been made.
While the inning is still being played, this last
scenario can cause a temporary situation where a run has already
scored, but its earned/unearned status is not yet certain. For
example, with two outs, a runner on third base
scores on a passed ball. For the time being, the run is unearned
since the runner should still be at third. If the batter strikes out to end the inning,
it will stay that way. If the batter gets a base hit, which
would have scored the runner anyway, the run now becomes
earned.
When pitchers are changed in the middle of an
inning, and one or more errors have already occurred, it is
possible to have a run charged as earned against a specific
pitcher, but unearned to the team. The simplest example is when the
defensive team records two outs and makes an error on a play that
would have been the third out. A new pitcher comes into the game,
and the next batter hits a home run. The
runner who reached on the error comes around to score, and his run
is unearned to both the prior pitcher and the team. However, the
run scored by the batter is counted as earned against the relief
pitcher, but unearned to the team (since there should have already
been three outs). Had the team not switched pitchers, neither run
would be counted as an earned run because that pitcher should have
already been out of that inning.
A pitcher is only charged with the number of
runners that reached base while he was pitching. When a pitching
change occurs, the new pitcher is said to "inherit"
any runners that are on base at the time, and if they later score,
those runs are charged (earned or unearned) to the prior pitcher.
Most box
scores now list inherited runners, and the number that scored,
as a statistic for the relief pitcher.
Historical differences
In the early history of major league baseball, the difference between the number of earned runs given up by a pitcher and the total number of runs given up was much more significant than today. For instance, Jim Devlin in 1876 pitched 66 complete games (662 innings pitched) with a 1.56 ERA but managed to record only five shutouts. The seeming discrepancy comes from the difference in the number of allowed runs (309) versus earned runs (108).External links
unearned in Korean: 자책점
unearned in Japanese: 自責点
unearned in Portuguese: Corrida limpa
unearned in Chinese: 自責分