Batters



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Showing page 63 of 4181 (83616 total matches)
YEAR TEAM
ID
NAME PLATE
APP
ON
BASE
AT
BATS
TOTAL
BASES
OB
AVG
SLG
AVG
OPS OPP
PIT
OB
OPP
PIT
SLG
OPP
PIT
OOPS
EXPCT
OB
AVG
EXPCT
SLG
AVG
EXPCT
OPS
LG
OPS
PME
OB
PME
SLG
PME PF PME
OB
PF
PME
SLG
PF
PME
PF
1946 SLN Whitey Kurowski 601 233 519 240 0.388 0.462 0.850 0.313 0.337 0.651 0.350 0.400 0.750 0.678 22.4 32.1 54.5 1.00 22.4 32.0 54.4
1997 BOS Mo Vaughn 628 264 527 295 0.420 0.560 0.980 0.342 0.431 0.773 0.381 0.495 0.877 0.766 24.5 34.2 58.7 1.05 22.7 31.6 54.3
1934 CLE Hal Trosky 685 266 625 374 0.388 0.598 0.987 0.362 0.422 0.783 0.375 0.510 0.885 0.744 9.2 55.3 64.5 1.05 7.7 46.6 54.3
1973 MON Ken Singleton 692 294 560 268 0.425 0.479 0.903 0.331 0.388 0.718 0.378 0.433 0.811 0.694 32.6 25.7 58.2 1.05 30.4 24.0 54.3
1946 NY1 Johnny Mize 444 194 377 219 0.437 0.581 1.018 0.340 0.388 0.728 0.388 0.484 0.873 0.678 21.6 36.4 57.9 1.04 20.3 34.1 54.3
1986 PHI Von Hayes 690 261 610 293 0.378 0.480 0.859 0.321 0.367 0.688 0.350 0.424 0.773 0.698 19.8 35.4 55.2 1.02 19.5 34.8 54.3
1933 SLN Joe Medwick 627 211 595 296 0.337 0.497 0.834 0.300 0.345 0.646 0.318 0.421 0.740 0.673 11.5 45.3 56.7 1.03 11.0 43.4 54.3
1997 ANA Tim Salmon 695 274 582 301 0.394 0.517 0.911 0.325 0.415 0.740 0.360 0.466 0.826 0.766 23.9 30.0 53.9 1.00 24.0 30.2 54.2
1960 CHA Roy Sievers 525 208 444 237 0.396 0.534 0.930 0.318 0.380 0.698 0.357 0.457 0.814 0.711 20.5 34.2 54.7 1.01 20.3 33.9 54.2
1968 CIN Pete Rose 692 270 626 294 0.390 0.470 0.860 0.312 0.356 0.668 0.351 0.413 0.764 0.637 27.1 35.2 62.4 1.10 23.5 30.6 54.2
1975 MIL George Scott 675 230 617 318 0.341 0.515 0.856 0.310 0.370 0.680 0.325 0.443 0.768 0.703 10.6 45.0 55.6 1.03 10.3 43.9 54.2
2012 NYN David Wright 670 262 581 286 0.391 0.492 0.883 0.307 0.404 0.712 0.349 0.448 0.797 0.715 27.9 25.5 53.5 0.98 28.3 25.8 54.2
1943 PIT Bob Elliott 652 249 581 260 0.382 0.448 0.829 0.310 0.337 0.647 0.346 0.392 0.738 0.666 23.3 31.9 55.3 1.02 22.8 31.3 54.2
1961 PIT Dick Stuart 576 198 532 309 0.344 0.581 0.925 0.313 0.404 0.717 0.328 0.492 0.821 0.728 8.9 47.0 55.9 1.03 8.6 45.6 54.2
1963 SLN Dick Groat 704 263 631 284 0.374 0.450 0.824 0.293 0.351 0.643 0.333 0.400 0.734 0.666 28.5 31.4 59.9 1.06 25.8 28.4 54.2
2016 ARI Paul Goldschmidt 705 289 579 283 0.410 0.489 0.899 0.310 0.409 0.719 0.360 0.449 0.809 0.732 35.3 23.0 58.2 1.06 32.8 21.4 54.1
2018 CHN Javier Baez 645 210 606 336 0.326 0.554 0.880 0.307 0.402 0.708 0.316 0.478 0.794 0.720 6.1 46.6 52.7 1.05 6.3 47.8 54.1
1975 CIN Johnny Bench 606 217 530 275 0.358 0.519 0.877 0.307 0.356 0.663 0.332 0.437 0.770 0.691 15.4 43.0 58.4 1.05 14.3 39.8 54.1
1939 NY1 Mel Ott 508 223 396 230 0.439 0.581 1.020 0.346 0.415 0.761 0.392 0.498 0.890 0.713 23.8 32.9 56.7 1.05 22.7 31.4 54.1
1956 BAL Bob Nieman 478 211 388 193 0.441 0.497 0.939 0.327 0.387 0.714 0.384 0.442 0.827 0.731 28.9 22.2 51.0 0.97 30.6 23.5 54.0
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Columns:
--------

Note: The batter's composite OB% and SLG% is obtained by the sum of all individual
plate appearances. For each PA, the OB% and SLG% used is versus pitchers of the same
hand as the one he's facing.

OPP_PIT_OB: the opposing pitcher OB% against, when facing batters of the same hand
OPP_PIT_SLG: the opposing pitcher SLG% against, when facing batters of the same hand
OPP_PIT_OOPS: the opposing pitcher OB% + SLG% against, when facing batters of the same hand

EXPCT_OB_AVG: the average of the opposing pitcher's OPP_PIT_OB and the batter's OB% (vs. L or R)
EXPCT_SLG_AVG: the average of the opposing pitcher's OPP_PIT_SLG and the batter's SLG% (vs. L or R)
EXPCT_OPS: the average of the opposing pitcher's OOPS and the batter's OPS (vs. L or R)

LG_OPS: the average league OPS, with the league of the home park being the league

PME_OB: the cumulative result of the plate appearance minus the EXPCT_OB_AVG
PME_SLG: the cumulative result of the plate appearance minus the EXPCT_SLG_AVG
PME: the cumulative result of the plate appearance minus the EXPCT_OPS

PF: the composite park factor the batter experienced, based on lefty-righty and park

PME_OB_PF: the cumulative result of the plate appearance minus the EXPCT_OB_AVG, with PF
PME_SLG_PF: the cumulative result of the plate appearance minus the EXPCT_SLG_AVG, with PF
PME_PF: the cumulative result of the plate appearance minus the EXPCT_OPS, with PF


On every pitcher versus batter matchup, we have a contest of the batter's ability and
the pitcher's ability. Although OPS and OOPS are not perfect statistics, they are
widely embraced and are relatively straightforward for most fans. They're approximations.
At some point, this process can be made smarter. Until then, this is where we are.

What is the batter's average ability on any plate appearance in a season? It's his OPS for the
season. Likewise, the pitcher's OOPS on the play is his seasonal OOPS. What is the expected
outcome? It's the average of the two, of course.

However, we have two issues to deal with -- the handedness (L or R) of the batter and pitcher
and the park where each event occurred.

1) Hand: For each and every PA, the expected outcome is affected by the hand of the batter and
pitcher. But, we only care about the batter's and pitcher's seasonal OPS/OOPS when it matches
the same scenario as the specific PA.

For example: If a left-handed batter is facing a right-handed pitcher, we only care about how
the batter did versus right-handed pitchers that year, and how the pitcher did versus left-handed
batters. Those are the specific OPS/OOPS values used from which to build the expected outcome.

Ex.: A LHB faces a RHP. The batter's OPS versus righties that year was 0.800. The pitcher's OOPS
versus lefties was 0.700. The expected outcome is the average of the two, 0.750.

Suppose the batter makes an out. His on-base average on the play was 0.000 and his slugging average
is also 0.000. On the play, the batter attained a negative PME, 0.000 minus 0.750 = -0.750. Meanwhile,
the pitcher attained a positive PME of 0.750 minus 0.000 = 0.750. All plays balance in this way.

What if the batter singles? His OB% was 1.000 and his SLG% is 1.000. That's an OPS of 2.000. His PME
is 2.000 minus 0.750 = 1.250, and the pitcher's PME is 0.750 minus 2.000 = -1.250.

All ~16 million plays in MLB from 1910-2025 were assessed in this manner.



2) Park: The parks where events occurred are important as well. Using the enhanced Park Factors at
this site -- those which break down PFs by L-L, L-R, R-L, R-R by using a base counting method -- a
composite PF is derived based on all of the PAs a batter had that season. After the seasonal PME is
compiled by adding all of the plays that year, the PME is divided by the PF* to obtain the final PME.

* The PME is compiled at the home and road level and divided by the corresponding PF. The PFs may
not seem correct but are indicative of the season. For example, the Rockies of 2001 had a composite
PF of 1.22. Todd Helton's (as a lefty) was more like 1.18. On the road, he was 0.97 -- for a
composite of 1.08 (1.18 + 0.97) / 2, the value shown. Before applying the PF, his home PME was about
96 and road was 9. Thus, most of the PME reduction was caused at home. It drops by ~16% (twice 1.08)
while his road PME stays relatively constant. His park-adjusted PME drops from ~105 to 91.


NOTE: This analysis concerns only what the batter does at the plate. Things like base running and
the quality of the opposing defense is not factored in (aside from taking extra bases on a hit).