10.12 ERRORS
Comment: Slow handling of the ball that does not
involve mechanical misplay shall not be construed as an error. For example, the
official scorer shall not charge a fielder with an error if such fielder fields
a ground ball cleanly but does not throw to first base in time to retire the
batter. It is not necessary that the fielder touch the ball to be charged
with an error. If a ground ball goes through a fielder’s legs or a fly ball
falls untouched and, in the scorer’s judgment, the fielder could have
handled the ball with ordinary effort, the official scorer shall charge such
fielder with an error. For example, the official scorer shall charge an
infielder with an error when a ground ball passes to either side of such
infielder if, in the official scorer’s judgment, a fielder at that position
making ordinary effort would have fielded such ground ball and retired a
runner. The official scorer shall charge an outfielder with an error if such
outfielder allows a fly ball to drop to the ground if, in the official scorer’s
judgment, an outfielder at that position making ordinary effort would have
caught such fly ball. If a throw is low, wide or high, or strikes the ground,
and a runner reaches base who otherwise would have
been put out by such throw, the official scorer shall charge the player making
the throw with an error. The official scorer shall not score mental mistakes or
misjudgments as errors unless a specific rule prescribes otherwise. A fielder’s
mental mistake that leads to a physical misplay—such as throwing the ball into
the stands or rolling the ball to the pitcher’s mound, mistakenly believing
there to be three outs, and thereby allowing a runner or runners to
advance—shall not be considered a mental mistake for purposes of this rule and
the official scorer shall charge a fielder committing such a mistake with an
error. The official scorer shall not charge an error if the pitcher fails to
cover first base on a play, thereby allowing a batter-runner to reach first
base safely. The official scorer shall not charge an error to a fielder who
incorrectly throws to the wrong base on a play. The official scorer shall
charge an error to a fielder who causes another fielder to misplay a ball—for
example, by knocking the ball out of the other fielder’s glove. On such a play,
when the official scorer charges an error to the interfering fielder, the
official scorer shall not charge an error to the fielder with whom the other
fielder interfered.