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Moved from Baseball statistics/BA Talk:
I will settle for good :) I actually wrote "good" to start with & then decided to go the superlative.
Just to be a geek, I downloaded the stats and found that 45 out of 151 qualifiers for the BA championship in the majors hit .300 (53/258 with 300 PA, 69/430 with 100 PA). So I agree, "good", at least among regulars. Of course, if you're a bench player hitting .300 you probably won't be a bench player much longer.
Then again, in the American league in 1968, a batting average of .300 was unquestionably excellent. But that was then, and this is definitely an era of offense. User:Dze27
== I have redefined nonono OBP to "On-base percentage. (H + BB + HBP) divided by (AB + BB + HBP + SF)." This is the official definition of the statistic. MLB.com defines it as "On-Base Percentage (OBP): Divide the total number of hits plus Bases on Balls plus hits by Pitch BY at Bats plus Bases on Balls plus hit by Pitch plus Sacrifice Flies." I just put it in English, so to speak.-- Djramey 14:31, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
So many of these pages are stubs, and I don't feel there's too much to say about them. I propose merging them into Batting statistics, Pitching statistics, etc., with redirects. Gemini6Ice 2 July 2005 19:53 (UTC)
Maybe somebody could include the estimated stats of Negro league players as footnotes to these lists. I think Satchel Paige is though to have won some 2000 games in his lifetime, and that Josh Gibson hit around 800 homeruns.
It would be nice if someone who knows could put information about what is good/bad/average for the stats listed.
A bunch of vanity posts wiped out the Major Proponents of Sabermetrics section, adding people who want to sell their stat services and computer games. I reverted the article to its pre-anon-edit state, but it needs review from people who know this material better than I do. I may have accidentally erased encyclopedic content as well as the vanity posts. Some of the anon posters have previously done the same thing on other baseball stat articles, such as Defense Independent Pitching Statistics, and it took real editor intervention there to finally reach any kind of compromise. Please help. OverInsured 06:35, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
Can someone explain to me why Catcher's interference does not count toward OBP like an HBP. TonyTheTiger 19:43, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
OBR 10.13"(f) When an umpire awards the batter or any runner or runners one or more bases because of interference or obstruction, charge the fielder who committed the interference or obstruction with one error, no matter how many bases the batter, or runner or runners, may be advanced." So, yes, catcher's interference is charged as an error.
Justus R
20:17, 27 March 2007 (UTC)
In the lead, it says,
Many statistics are even available from outside of Major League Baseball from leagues such as the National Association, the Federal League, and there are even some statistics available for the Negro Leagues.
While I realize that the status of the NA as a major league is tenuous at best, every baseball book that I currently possess lists the FL as a major league. ¿ςפקι Д Иτς! ☺ ☻ 00:18, 1 December 2006 (UTC)
I would recommend leaving the Federal League out of the definition of Major League. Just because a view is popular, doesn't mean it's right. More specifically, read the most recent Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract for an extremely compelling argument that the FL was not a major league by any reasonable argument, and that it's level of talent and competition was far below that of the American League, National League or any of the Negro Leagues. ☺
I just came to this article hoping to find an external links section and found none. Perhaps a small section with links to two or three of the most useful external websites could be added? SaltyBoatr 17:51, 26 April 2007 (UTC)
MLB.com lists RF on its players' pages, can anyone tell me what that is? Mglovesfun 08:41, 1 June 2007 (UTC)
Can anyone tell me what the statistic GB (Games Back) means? Uniqueuponhim 19:44, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
It means the number of games more that the trailing team needs to win than the leading team wins to give the two teams the same winning percentage. The games back number is always calculated based on the team leading the division. Here's an example -- if the Mariners were 4 games behind the Angels with 20 games to go, the Mariners must win 4 more games than the Angels win to end with the same percentage; i.e. if the Angels won 14 of the last 20, the Mariners would need to win 18 of the last 20 to tie, win 19 to take the division lead. Krisbang 01:21, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
Sorry I don't have the time, but I would suggest that someone improve the last section, specifically because the "Best" column of those tables confuses two separate things - season best records and career best records. For example, the cited ERA "Best" is a career stat (Luis Tiant has the best season ERA), and the same problem exists for BA and SLG. Some "Best" stats only make sense for a season, so one may elect to not include a lifetime citation, and vice-versa.
Adcva ( talk) 13:43, 29 August 2009 (UTC)Allen Clark
The following section was removed. It was the second paragraph, but is only tangentially related to the article.
Dialog from the 1998 Kevin Costner motion picture For Love of the Game may epitomize the place of statistics in the minds of baseball players, reporters and fans:
Jane Aubrey: Do you lose very much?
Billy Chapel: I lose. I've lost 134 times.
Jane Aubrey: You count them?
Billy Chapel: We count everything. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.90.146.5 ( talk) 04:26, 3 November 2009 (UTC)
I have been editing the pages of many pitchers and was frustrated by my inability to link to several stats without their own pages. Rather than create more stubby pages for things like "whiff rate," what I have done is add anchor links to several entries on this page. That way, if you want to use whiff rate in an article, you can link to it with [[baseball statistics#whiff rate|whiff rate]]. -- Jprg1966 (talk) 17:59, 29 June 2012 (UTC)
"Hands lost" is an ancient baseball statistic, one of the first ever kept, as I recall. It formerly had its own article, a tiny stub. Somebody recently directed that article to this one, without bothering to mention "Hands lost" over here. IMHO that is an unjustified elimination of content, but I don't know enough about baseball stats to have more than an opinion about it. You can see the original article HERE. Maybe somebody over here can do whatever needs to be done. Lou Sander ( talk) 00:37, 1 November 2016 (UTC)