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∙ 14y agoa perfect game is a no hitter, but a no hitter is not always a perfect game. do the the fact that a no-hitter can have people get on base by walks and errors, and a perfect game has nobody get on base by any means.
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∙ 12y agoWiki User
∙ 14y agoIf he throws it on the 2nd day of the season, after the same team had a perfect game thrown against them on opening day.
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∙ 12y agoNo. In a perfect game no reaches base. You can allow a run in a no hitter though through allowing baserunners via walks errors etc.
Yes, but they don't affect your batting average.
Only two variables affect batting average - hits and at-bats.
Walks are not counted in figuring out Batting Averages. It's basically like you didn't take an at- bat for walks.
When a batter reaches on an error, an at bat is charged (since there would have been a put out had the error not occurred), so it will cause a decrease in batting average
Walks count as an official plate appearance and are used in determining whether a player has met the minimum number of plate appearances needed to be eligible to win the batting title but are not used in calculating a player's batting average.
i know
A contact force that could affect the ball when a pitcher throws it is friction between the pitcher's fingers and the ball, which helps create spin and movement on the pitch. A non-contact force that could affect the ball is air resistance, which can slow down the ball's speed and alter its trajectory.
Economists use two sets of concepts to answer questions. First they apply efficiency concepts such as productive efficiency. Then they ask how perfect competition and monopoly affect the consumer.
The past perfect tense of "also think" is "had also thought."
YES
Practice makes perfect - the more you work on the material, the better you understand it.
Sperm in the market flow