Well, I feel that Salty won't like my comment...but the world of logic and the world of statistics don't necessairly overlap, and clearly Salty prefers to follow the logic path; I prefer to rely onto statistics.
In the other thread (3 and out...about Bonds probability to hit homeruns), I gave the website where you can calculate the probabilities like the question in the first post.
http://stattrek.com/m/online-calculator/binomial.aspxBrown has a 1.5% probability of allowing a wild pitch (wp=6, so 1/20 * 6/20= 0.015) (in fact, Brown has more chance than 1.5%, but more to this below). First line of the website is 0.015.
As you probably know, in super-advance mode, as soon as a runner is on-base, you have to roll for the wildpitch, and you have to roll it again if there is a situational change (for example, when a player steals a base).
(As a side note, I believe that most owners who play face-to-face under the advanced mode roll for the wild pitch only when trying to steal a base, so wild pitch will occur online much more frequently than if you play face-to-face under the advanced mode)
In this case (first post, with Kevin Brown), as soon as the first hitter, Jennings, gets on-base, up until the end of the inning, there were men on bases. At every situation change, so when Jennings stole a base, or when a wild pitch occurs, there's another roll. So overall, there has been in that inning 11 rolls to test the wild pitch. Second line of the website is 11.
There were 3 wild pitches, so 3 fulfills the third line.
After calculations, you see that the probability to have 3 wild pitches or more in such inning (11 situations) is 0.000509, or 0.05%, which is quite rare.
This inning was the first inning of a post-season game, but it could have happened in any game of the season. So if you enter that probability above (0.000509), and ask the system what's the probability that such inning (or worse, with 4 wild pitches or more) happens in any inning of the season of YOUR TEAM. THAT probability is 52%. And of ANY TEAM in the league (if they all had pitchers with a rating of wp=6), that probablity is 99.9%
So as Radiohead sings, those three wild pitches were an accident waiting to happen.
Final note. Not a lot of owners know that wild pitches can also occur on the Catcher's def-X. The worse the catcher, the higher the probability that a wild pitch occurs, and this has nothing to do with the pitcher's wp rating. I guess we should read in those occasions wild pitch (CATCH-X), but I never checked if it did.