|
Offensive Statistics

In Alphabetical
Order |
|
Offensive Statistical
Formulas |
|
Adjusted Production
[APRO or PRO]
(On Base Percentage
divided by League OBP) + (Slugging Average divided by League
SA) -1
The adjusted production statistic
is a park and league adjusted version of on base plus slugging
percentage. It is specifically used and created by Total Baseball
for comparison of players from different eras in different parks.
This is an advanced statistic which requires the complete understanding
of on base percentage, slugging average and a park adjustment
factor. Total Baseball has adjusted OBP and SA for the player's
home park and League OBP and League SA are the league average
for each statistic respectively. As in OPS, the decimal point
is dropped when APRO in seen or used. |
|
Batting Average
or [AVG or BA]
Number of
Hits (divided by) Number of At Bats
Easily the most common statistic
in baseball and the most understood - even outside of the game.
It has been historically used as the benchmark for hitters since
the late 1800's making it historically rich, easy to understand,
easy to compute and almost everyone knows what a .300 hitter
is. One of the only disadvantages is the batting average statistic
does not take into account walks or extra-base hits. |
|
Base On Balls
Percentage
Number of
Total Walks (divided by) Number of Plate Appearances
Another common statistic in baseball
and also quite easy to understand and easy to compute. The primary
purpose for this offensive measurement is to gauge the percentage
of a batter's appearance at the plate that directly result in
the player being walked. Newer than batting average but nice
to use and understand for determining hitters that are "perhaps"
more respected or simply have a better "eye." |
|
Home Run Ratio
Number of
Home Runs Hit (divided by) Number of At Bats
Another common statistic in baseball
and also quite easy to understand and easy to compute. The primary
purpose for this offensive measurement is to gauge the percentage
of a batter's at bats that directly result in the player hitting
a home run. Newer than batting average but nice to use and understand
for determining hitters that are more apt to hit home runs more
often than others. |
|
Isolated Power
[ISO]
Total Bases
- Hits (divided by) At Bats
Isolated Power, or extra-bases
per at bats, was also invented by Branch Rickey and All Roth
during the 1950's. On Base Percentage measured for the manager
how often a player reaches base while the isolated power showed
them how often those bases reached were extra base hits - beyond
a single. The total bases here was calculated by awarding 0 for
a single, 1 for a double, 2 for a triple and 3 for a home run. |
|
Major League
Equivalency [MLE]
Secret Formula
This is a "secret"
formula used and developed exclusive by Bill James of STATS,
Inc. which is used to determine what a Minor League player would
have hit had he been a player in the Major Leagues. It is not
used a tool for future predictions but rather determines the
player's level of performance in the past and adjusts for the
difficult level in the big leagues to estimate performance on
a current Major League roster. |
|
On Base Percentage
[OBP or OBA]
(Hits + Walks
+ Hit-By-Pitch) divided by (At Bats + Walks+ Hit-By-Pitch + Sac
Flys)
The On Base Percentage statistic
was originally created by Branch Rickey and Allan Roth in the
1950's as a means to measure the percentage of times a player
reaches any base. It did not originally include the sacrifice
fly denomination but when it was officially adapted in 1984 it
appeared using the formula written above. It is easily one of
the most important statistics and it is specifically written
with managers in mind. |
|
On Base Plus
Slugging [OPS]
On Base Percentage
+ Slugging Average
This is not a true statistic
by definition but it is often used as an index for rating an
overall player's performance and production versus his fellow
players. The formula above requires the use and understanding
of two others [OBP and SA], also on this page, and when seen
in text appears without the decimal point. |
|
Plate Appearances
[PA]
At-Bats +
Bases on Balls + Hit By Pitcher + Sacrifice Hits + Sacrifice
Flies + Times Reached on Defensive Interference
Plate appearances have long sparked
controversy as it is a factor used to determine the yearly batting
champion. Currently, 3.1 plate appearances per game are required
for batting title eligibility. |
|
Runs Created
[RC]
On Base Percentage
+ Total Bases
This statistic was originally
created by Bill James to measure a player's total offensive production.
By combining the two statistical (OBP and TB which are listed
on this page) results you can determine that desired production.
Bill James describes it by saying scoring runs consists of two
actions: First - getting on base or creating baserunners (which
is on base percentage) and Second - the advancing of those runners
around the bases (which is total bases). A superb stat that creates
a great index for offensive ratings. |
|
Runs Created
Per 25 [RC25]
Runs Created
(divided by) Number of Outs x 25
This statistic was also created
by Bill James and uses the results of the runs created formula
listed above. You then divide by the number of outs the player
actually made and multiply it by 25. The figure is an estimate
of how many runs a team made of |
|
Slugging Average
[SA or SLG]
Number of
(Singles + [2 x Doubles] +[ 3 x Triples] + [4 x Home Runs]) divided
by At Bats
A players Slugging Average, or
Slugging Percentage, is directly defined as total bases per at-bat.
To calculate a player's total bases you award a 1 for a single,
a 2 for a double, a 3 for a triple, and a 4 for a home run then
add them all together. Divide that by the total number of at
bats a player has and you can easily determine the overall number
of bases a player generally touches during his at bats. |
|
Strikeout
Ratio
Number of
Strikeouts (divided by) Number of At Bats
Another common statistic in baseball
and also quite easy to understand and easy to compute. The primary
purpose for this offensive measurement is to gauge the percentage
of a batter's at bats that directly result in the player striking
out. Not one of the nicest hitting statistics to lead the league
in each year. |
|
Stolen Base
Percentage
Number of
Successful Stolen Bases (divided by) Number of Stolen Base Attempts
Another common statistic in baseball
and also quite easy to understand and easy to compute. The primary
purpose for this offensive measurement is to gauge the percentage
of a base runners attempted steals that directly result in the
player successfully stealing the base. |
|
Stolen Base
Runs [SBR]
(.3 x Stolen
Bases) - (.6 x Caught Stealing)
This is another very good Total
Baseball statistic aimed at quantifying base-stealing. Numerous
statistical studies done by Total Baseball have shown that the
break even success rate for steals (the rate at which an attempt
to steal is neither helping nor hurting the team in terms of
total runs scored) is about 67%. Each successful steal adds approximately
.3 runs to a team's total runs scored which is much less than
often believed. Therefore, the statistic is meant to estimate
the impact of base-stealers, which, other than the elite base-stealers,
rarely amounts to more than a few runs per year for each team. |
|
Total Base
Percentage [TBP]
(Hits + Walks
+ Hit-By-Pitch) divided by (At Bats + Walks+ Hit-By-Pitch)
This statistic is no longer used
as a newer / improved version was adopted in 1984 by Major League
Baseball and listed above - See On Base Percentage. This worked
the in the same respect however it failed to account for a player's
sacrifice flys hit during a game. |