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  2. Glossary of baseball terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_baseball_terms

    Baseball announcers will sometimes refer to a batted ball going back through the pitcher's mound area as having gone through the box, or a pitcher being removed from the game will be said to have been knocked out of the box. In the early days of the game, there was no mound; the pitcher was required to release the ball while inside a box drawn ...

  3. Baseball statistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baseball_statistics

    For pitchers, wins, ERA, and strikeouts are the most often-cited statistics, and a pitcher leading his league in these statistics may also be referred to as a "triple crown" winner. General managers and baseball scouts have long used the major statistics, among other factors and opinions, to understand player value.

  4. Fielding independent pitching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fielding_independent_pitching

    In 1999, Voros McCracken became the first to detail and publicize these effects to the baseball research community when he wrote on rec.sport.baseball, "I've been working on a pitching evaluation tool and thought I'd post it here to get some feedback. I call it 'Defensive Independent Pitching' and what it does is evaluate a pitcher base[d ...

  5. Quality start - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality_start

    In baseball, a quality start (QS) is a statistic for a starting pitcher defined as a game in which the pitcher completes at least six innings and permits no more than three earned runs. The quality start was developed by sportswriter John Lowe in 1985 while writing for The Philadelphia Inquirer . [ 1 ]

  6. Walks plus hits per inning pitched - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walks_plus_hits_per_inning...

    WHIP near 1.00 or lower over the course of a season will often rank among the league leaders in Major League Baseball (MLB).. The lowest single-season WHIP in MLB history through 2018 is 0.7373 from Pedro Martínez pitching for the Boston Red Sox in 2000, which broke the previous record of 0.7692 of Guy Hecker of the Louisville Eclipse in 1882. [3]

  7. Win–loss record (pitching) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Win–loss_record_(pitching)

    The last pitcher to win 25 games was Bob Welch in 1990. The New York Times wrote in 2011 that as advanced statistics have expanded, a pitcher's win–loss record has decreased in importance. Many times a win is substantially out of the pitcher's control; even a dominant pitcher cannot record a win if his team does not score any runs for him.

  8. Statcast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statcast

    Pitching. Release: Measures the time from pitcher's first movement out of the stretch to the release point of the pitch. Extension: Measures the distance of the release point of the pitch from the front edge of the pitching rubber. Velocity: Measures the peak velocity of a pitch at any point from its release to the front edge of home plate.

  9. NERD (sabermetrics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NERD_(sabermetrics)

    The premise for NERD was developed in Cistulli's piece "Why We Watch" in which he establishes the five reasons that baseball continues to captivate the American imagination from game to game: "Pitching Matchups," "Statistically Notable (or Otherwise Compelling) Players," "Rookies (and Debuts)," "Seasonal Context," and "Quality of Broadcast". [5]