Loading…
One moment while the latest numbers come in.
One moment while the latest numbers come in.
Elite power and walks; lives with the strikeouts.
Sal Stewart creates bases at a near-elite clip — better than 86% of qualified hitters. No real holes either — the weakest mark (strikeout rate) sits right around the league average.
Same archetype, nearest by rate — the hitters whose profile looks most like this one.
Bases per plate appearance
| Sal Stewart | League | Percentile | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bases per ball in play(higher = better) | .645 | .510 | 86th |
| Walk rate(higher = better) | 11% | 8% | 60th |
| Strikeout rate(fewer = better) | 21% | 23% | 56th |
vs LHP: shrunk estimate 0.560 EB/PA, 89% credible interval 0.508 to 0.607, based on 107 plate appearances. Raw (unshrunk) rate: 0.633 EB/PA.
Raw vs LHP rate (0.633) is off this scale — small samples like this are exactly why the shrunk estimate (the dot) is the trustworthy number, not the raw one.
vs RHP: shrunk estimate 0.514 EB/PA, 89% credible interval 0.470 to 0.556, based on 303 plate appearances. Raw (unshrunk) rate: 0.499 EB/PA.
Hits it to Pull most often, and does the most damage to Oppo.
Robbed 7 times — crushed balls the simulator scores as near-certain hits that died in a glove.
9 lucky hits — balls with a hit probability under 20% that found grass.
* Approximate: sacrifice flies and bunts aren't distinguishable in our data, so every ball in play counts as an at-bat. Slightly off official figures.
His best games this season by estimated bases.
Trending up: walk rate, contact · Trending down: power
Estimated bases per plate appearance — higher = more offensive value
Home runs per plate appearance — higher = more power
Walks per plate appearance — higher = more plate discipline
Strikeouts per plate appearance — lower = better contact