I think 45.00, but I'm not sure
No pitcher in baseball history has ever thrown the minimum of 27 pitches in a 9 inning game.
Depends on how many pitches are thrown
Pitch count has nothing to do with eligibility to be the winning pitcher. In a scheduled 9-inning game, the starting pitcher must pitch 5 complete innings to be eligible to be the winning pitcher. Relief pitchers must be the pitcher of record when the winning team takes the lead, and never relinquishes the lead, to be the winning pitcher.
A pitcher who doesn't get an out in the 1st inning and who is pulled from the game is still considering the starting pitcher. He will be listed this way on the team spreadsheet and roster.
For a nine inning perfect game the pitcher would record 27 outs (3 outs in each of the 9 innings).
The win goes to the relief pitcher (assuming there was more than one relief pitcher) whom the official scorer feels was most instrumental in the victory. That relief pitcher must pitch at least 1 full inning, or pitch a crucial out if he pitches less than one inning.
There are many pitchers who have made the fewest pitches in one inning. Three. Each batter swung at the first pitch and it resulted in an out. It still happens today, although it's usually four to six.
Yes, the pitcher who pitched the bottom of the previous inning would get the win and if a new pitcher is used in the bottom of the next inning and holds the lead, he would get the save.
He is a pitcher...he mostly closes (Pitches last inning/s (1/9) of a game for the Yankees)
No, if the hitter eventually scores in that inning, it would not be an earned run.
If the relief pitcher pitches 3 innings, and completes the game, and never gave up the lead, he would get a save.
No he does not. You must enter the game with the score being within 3 runs of the other team. But if the pitcher pitches three innings without giving up the lead, (after the starter) then he is awarded the save as well. example: 1-0, 5-2, 9-8