yes
Yes, the player is credited with a RBI.
Yes, only things that don't count as at bats are walks, hbp or if a baserunner gets thrown out before your at bat is completed.
Yes
i believe that if you are walked or hit by a pitch and it scores a run you are accounted with an RBI, and the pitcher gets an earned run
no
Good question. The only thing that would be close to a WILD PITCH RBI would be if the batter swung at the pitch for a third strike, which of course the catcher couldn't catch. There would have to be a runner on third, and the batter would have to be safe at first on the dropped third strike rule. I do not believe that this would truly be an RBI though, because technically, a dropped third strike is like a walk, the batter is not credited with a hit.
There are quite a few ways to score from 3rd base in softball: * You can steal * RBI * If the bases are loaded you can get walked in * If the bases are loaded the batter can get hit by pitch * If you are in 12u or about you can perform a delay steal
RBI in baseball stands for Runs Batted In. It is the amount of runs scored in a game as a direct result of a particular batters at bats. So, if there is a man on third and the batter gets a base hit and the run scores, the batter got a run batted in for that at-bat. This is tallied throughout the game and season. The batter does not have to get a base hit in order to get a RBI. He can get an RBI for any run that scores directly as a result of: - base hit - draws a bases loaded walk - gets a HBP (Hit By Pitch) with bases loaded - Sacrifice Fly - Sacrifice Bunt - Fielder's Choice (in which a runner advance home on the batted ball, not the throws) Additionally, there are are several situations in which a batter can get an RBI, the most notable way he does not get an RBI is on a fielding error, or any run the was determined would have not scored without the aid of an error on that particular play. RBI also stands for Reserve Bank of India. It is India's Central Bank. It is the authority that announces India's Monetary policy. In the military RBI stands for "Recruiter Background Investigation."
it is scored a wp the batter doesn't get RBI
he played for minor league in 1985 I believe he had 3 homeruns and 8 rbi's
No. You are credited with a stolen base and a run scored, but neither you nor the batter is credited with an RBI. It's the same way with scoring from third on a wild pitch, a balk, a passed ball, an error, or a double-play: no RBI is awarded.