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About Tom Schott
Expertise
I will deal with the major leagues only from 19th century to present. I`m good on baseball history, records, statistics, ballparks. Try to stick to on-the-field stuff. I`m not interested in personal off-the-field stuff like spouses, girl friends, drug habits, salaries, mascots, etc. If you already know the answer to the question, please don't ask it. I don't want to play "stump the expert."

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I've written on the subject, and I have substantial library of resources.

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Numerous encyclopedia, newspaper, magazine articles. One book, several book chapters.

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Ph.D. in American history.

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Bevy of writing awards.

 
   

You are here:  Experts > Games > Trivia > Baseball Trivia (General) > Winning Pitcher

Baseball Trivia (General) - Winning Pitcher


Expert: Tom Schott - 6/26/2007

Question
I was just hired as the official scorer for a minor league baseball team.  The issue hasn't come up yet, but if a starting pitcher pitches less than 5 IP, I know he does not get credit for the win, it then is the decision of the official scorer.  But, let's say the starting pitcher goes 4 innings, pitches perfectly, leaves with the lead.  Then 4 relief pitchers do not do well but the team still wins.  Could the official scorer give the win to the starting pitcher or does it have to go to one of the relievers?

Answer
Hi Peter,

The rules are pretty explicit about the answer to your question. In the case you cite, the official scorer would have to give the win to one of the relievers, as unfair before the face of God and man that that might be. although he is allowed the latitude of choosing the reliever who he thought was most effective. Here's the relevant portion of the rules that govern:

10.17 Winning And Losing Pitcher

(a) The official scorer shall credit as the winning pitcher that pitcher whose team assumes a lead while such pitcher is in the game, or during the inning on offense in which such pitcher is removed from the game, and does not relinquish such lead, unless
(1) such pitcher is a starting pitcher and Rule 10.17(b) applies; or
(2) Rule 10.17(c) applies.

Rule 10.17(a) Comment: Whenever the score is tied, the game becomes a new contest insofar as the winning pitcher is concerned. Once the opposing team assumes the lead, all pitchers who have pitched up to that point and have been replaced are excluded from being credited with the victory. If the pitcher against whose pitching the opposing team gained the lead continues to pitch until his team regains the lead, which it holds to the finish of the game, that pitcher shall be the winning pitcher.

(b) If the pitcher whose team assumes a lead while such pitcher is in the game, or during the inning on offense in which such pitcher is removed from the game, and does not relinquish such lead, is a starting pitcher who has not completed
(1) five innings of a game that lasts six or more innings on defense, or
(2) four innings of a game that lasts five innings on defense, then the official scorer shall credit as the winning pitcher the relief pitcher, if there is only one relief pitcher, or the relief pitcher who, in the official scorer’s judgment was the most effective, if there is more than one relief pitcher.

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