How do you work out the Baseball stats like batting .300, RBI's, etc?
Question:I am trying to work out what all the info means when reading or watching baseball on TV.
I know that HR are Home Runs and that RBI are Runs Batted In but do not know what most of the others mean like:
GABRH2B3BHRRBITBBBSOSBCSOBPSLG...
Answers:
Can anybody explain why the Yankees cant score any runs with that $100 million lineup?
G - GamesAB - At Bats
R - Runs
H - Hits
2B - Doubles
3B - Triples
HR - Home Runs
RBI - Runs Batted In
TB - Total Bases
BB - Walks (Base on Balls)
SO - Strikeouts
SB - Stolen Bases
CS - Caught Stealing
OBP - On Base Percentage
SLG - Slugging Percentage
Below is a link that will tell you the abbreviations, and if you click on them, how they are figured! Good luck!
Need Help Buying a baseball bat?
bb-base on ballsk-strikeout (for pitcher or batter)
era- earned run average for a pitcher
go to a baseball website if you want to see them all...its just most are selp explanatory
What will be the White Sox record against Detroit this year?
G= games playedAB= at bats
R= runs
H= hits
2B= doubles
3B= triples
HR= home runs
BB= walks
SLG= slugging percentage
Can anyone tell me how to stop hitting groundballs and start hitting into the outfield?
I like how you just melded 18 different stats and called it one. Clever. Some of the more obscure stats are actually like that, such as RBIWRISPWOTHP (RBI when runner in scoring position weighs over three-hundred pounds).Some of the ones you'll see most often (beyond the obvious ones) are:
TB: total bases. 1 total base for a single, 2 for a double, 3 for a triple, 4 for a HR.
SLG%: total bases / at-bats.
OPS: on-base percentage + SLG%
IBB: intentional base-on-balls
ERA: earned-run average, i.e. average number of earned runs per 9 innings. Divide earned runs allowed by innings pitched, multiply by 9.
WHIP: walks + hits divided by innings pitched.
K/9: average number of strikeouts per 9 innings.
Saves: the number of times a reliever finishes the game holding on to a lead of 3 runs or less. As long as the lead is not lost, a save is rewarded.
Holds: the number of times a reliever exits (but does not finish) the game holding on to a lead of 3 runs or less.
Quality start: a start in which at least 6 innings were pitched, yielding fewer than 3 earned runs.
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