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BOSSHOG

(40,271 posts)
Fri Oct 4, 2024, 07:23 PM Oct 4

A question about Pete Rose Records

Reading in a paper today summarizing Pete Roses life. It listed his baseball records and two baffled me.

He is career leader in PLATE APPEARANCES (15,890)

He is career leader in AT BATS (14,053)

I’m lost and you guys are more fun than Google. What the heck is the difference?

6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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A question about Pete Rose Records (Original Post) BOSSHOG Oct 4 OP
Walks and sacrifices don't count as at bats displacedvermoter Oct 4 #1
Plate appearances include at-bats Metaphorical Oct 4 #2
Thank You My Friend BOSSHOG Oct 4 #3
One Other Thing To Add, Boss ProfessorGAC Oct 4 #4
Damn BOSSHOG Oct 4 #5
Alas, Yes ProfessorGAC Oct 4 #6

Metaphorical

(2,345 posts)
2. Plate appearances include at-bats
Fri Oct 4, 2024, 07:33 PM
Oct 4

A "plate appearance" refers to any time a batter comes to the plate and completes a turn at bat, including walks, hit-by-pitches, and sacrifice hits, while an "at bat" only counts when a batter is put out or reaches base via a hit, fielder's choice, or error, excluding walks and sacrifice plays; essentially, a plate appearance is a broader category that includes all at-bats, but not all plate appearances are considered at-bats.

In some cases, a pitcher may decide to deliberately walk a good batter. For instance - it's two outs, there are men on second and third, a powerhouse hitter comes up to bat, and a weaker batter is behind him in the rotation. The pitcher will deliberately signal to both the batter and the catcher that they are going to give him a deliberate walk, hoping that he could then force the follow-on batter to pop out. It happens often enough that this is not considered an at-bat.

ProfessorGAC

(70,597 posts)
4. One Other Thing To Add, Boss
Fri Oct 4, 2024, 08:17 PM
Oct 4

I'm sure you've seen or heard OBP, on on-base percentage.
Since this includes getting on base by walk or hit by pitch, those get added to hits for the numerator.
Plate Appearances, not at-bats, are used for the denominator.
So, Plate Appearances are actually used in the calculation of an important stat.
If they didn't, a guy who walked 90 times would see there OBP 150 points higher than the batting average. But, the 90 gets added to the denominator, too.
To whit:
Say a .300 hitter has 600 at-bats. 180 hits. Now, let's say that guy walked 90 times.
He reached base 270 times. With 600 at-bats, his OBP would be .450.
Instead, that 270 times reaching base is divided by (600 at-bats + 90 other plate appearances), or 690 PA. The OBP would be .391.
Now, having an OBP 30% higher than the average is really good, but it's not .450.
Rose walked about 1,560 times. That's 60 something per year, which is good, but not great.
That's why his batting average is tied for 137th all-time but his OBP is 240 something on the list.
He didn't get on base often enough to push his all-time OBP into the upper stratosphere.

BOSSHOG

(40,271 posts)
5. Damn
Fri Oct 4, 2024, 08:23 PM
Oct 4

So Math Geeks run Major League Baseball. I do appreciate your time and effort Professor. Truly love the game. And now I find out I don’t have to think about it, just watch. The Phillies are in IT. So I’ll be wrapped around the axle for awhile.

ProfessorGAC

(70,597 posts)
6. Alas, Yes
Fri Oct 4, 2024, 08:36 PM
Oct 4

A problem comes in, however, when stats people use indexes and then misunderstand the leverage these exert on winning & losing
An example is WAR. The 3 biggest proponents of WAR don't even calculate it the same way. And, they are all guilty of weighting (better termed "fudging&quot things by adjusting until guys like Ruth, Bonds, Mays, Aaron rose to the top.
And, in examining the calculations of WAR, lots of statistical experts & mathematical modeling people (like me), there are several *what the heck are they doing this for" moments.
Yes, the math geeks are running baseball. It doesn't mean they're doing ut right, despite the lovely story we saw in Moneyball.

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