Yes, probably in the major leagues. This is a judgment call by the official scorer. An error is charged if a major league player would be able to catch the ball with an ordinary effort. The lights in major parks are excellent so unless there is fog or some unusual conditions it is an error if a catchable ball drops even if the player does not see it.
fumble
The answer is ... it depends. A player who obstructs the ball when it's travelling towards the table loses the point, whereas they don't if the ball is travelling away from the table.
Depends upon how he lost it. If an opposing player knocked it out of his hand, then he can. If he loses it on his own and takes some steps before recovering it, then it would be traveling.
yes it is
It would not be an error if the defensive player fields the ball cleanly.
When a player hits the ball to get on base without an error in the field.
after your team loses posession of the ball
Nothing happens but it reflects poorly on the player throwing the glove. If he does hit the ball with his glove a dead ball is called and the runners advance two bases and the fielder is charged with an error.
A serve error is when the ball fails to land in the 30x30 courton the opposite team's side. If the ball touches any part of the body of a player on the opposite side and goes out, it is considered good. I hope this helps(:
The person who sunk the cue ball and the eight ball off the break loses.
No. According to Major League Baseball's Official Rule 10.12(a)(1), the game's official scorer should only charge an error to the fielder if he could have otherwise "handled the ball with ordinary effort." A missed diving play, such as a play in which an outfielder catches a fly ball while diving but then loses it upon hitting the ground, would not fall under the criteria of an error because it is not a play that could have been made under ordinary effort.
Yes, if the ball is pitched in a location where the catcher has a reasonable chance of stopping the ball, that is a passed ball and the error is charged to the catcher. If the ball is pitched in a location where the catcher does NOT have a reasonable chance of stopping the ball, that is a wild pitch and the error is charged to the pitcher. Actually, a passed ball is NOT charged as an error against the catcher. It's simply charged as a passed ball. Not terribly logical, I agree, but that's the rule.