On base percentage plus slugging percentage
Wiki User
∙ 13y agoIt is 1012 in base 4 or 70 in decimal.
50% plus 50%
12 percent plus 20 percent equals 32 percent. To add one percentage to another simply add the numbers together and keep the percentage sign.
about 68%
To subtract a percentage:Type the total amountPress the "Sell" keyType the percentage you want to subtractPress the "MGN" keyTotal minus percentage will display on screenExample:To subtract 20 per cent from 150, type:150 [SELL] 20 [MGN]To add a percentage:You have to cheat on this oneMove the top switch to "Rate Set"Type the percentage you want to addPress the "Tax+" keyType the total amountPress the "Tax+" keyTotal plus percentage will display on screenExample:To add 20 per cent to 150:First slide switch to "Rate Set"Type 20Press [Tax+]Slide switch back to "GT"Type 150 [Tax+]
OPS stands for 'on base percentage plus slugging percentage' and is equal to (on base percentage + slugging percentage). If a player's on base percentage is .350 and slugging percentage is .500, the OPS is .850.
On base percentage Plus Slugging percentage.
On-Base Plus Slugging. So it is a combination of a players On-Base Percentage (OBP) and their Slugging Percentage (SLG). For example, if a player has a .448 OBP and a .613 SLG they would have an OPS of 1.061.
On Base Percentage Plus Slugging Percentage
OBP stands for On Base Percentage
OPS stands for "On-Base Plus Slugging" this is a great tool to compare players on their overall offensive contribution. In order to be among the league leaders in OPS, a player must hit for average, display a great batting eye (to collect walks), and hit for power. An OPS over 900 is considered quite good, and an OPS over 1000 is sure be among the league leaders. To calculate this you need to first know a players On-Base Percentage and their Slugging Percentage --- then you simply add those 2 together Calculating On Base Percentage: OBP = (Hits+Walks+HBP)/(ABs+Walks+HBP) or -- (Hits+Walks+HBP)/Plate Appearances Calculating Slugging Percentage: Slugging % = Total Bases/At-Bats --- to calculate Total Bases you assign the following (Single=1, Double=2, Triple=3, HR=4)
Apparently it means this:100* [OBP/1g OBP + SLG/1g SLG - 1]Adjusted to the player's ballpark (s)Don't ask me what it means because it doesn't even make any sense to a fifth grader.
It is OPS which is on base plus slugging percentage.
On-base Plus Slugging (OPS) Definition OPS adds on-base percentage and slugging percentage to get one number that unites the two. It's meant to combine how well a hitter can reach base, with how well he can hit for average and for power. It can also be used in evaluating pitchers; when used in that context, it is referred to as OPS against.
It is a combination of 3 different stats. They are OBP/SLG/OPS, which mean On Base Percentage (OBP) Slugging Percentage (SLG) OBP Plus SLG (OPS) Here is the formula for each one. On Base Percentage (OBP) is used to determine how often a batter reaches base safely divided by his number of plate appearances. [Hits (H) + Walks (BB) + Hit By Pitch (HBP)] / [At Bats (AB) + Walks (BB) + Hit By Pitch (HBP) + Sacrifice Flies (SF)] Slugging Percentage (SLG) is used to determine how much power a batter has Total Bases (TB) / At Bats (AB) On Base Percentage Plus Slugging Percentage (OPS) is exactly that: OBP + SLG This statistic is used to determine how well-rounded a batter is.
This is simply on-base percent plus Slugging. It is a stat similar to Gross Production Average -- it gives a number. The higher the better, on-base percent is: (hits + walks + hit by pitch) / plate appearances. Reaching on an error or a fielders choice does not count as an on-base. A sac fly does count as a plate appearance. Slugging is: (1*Singles + 2*doubles + 3*triples + 4*homers) / total At Bats. sacs and walks do not count as at bats. The theoretical max for on-base percent is 1 (assuming you always get on base) The theoretical max for Slugging is 4 (assuming you get a home run at every at bat) to determine OPS; you just add the on-base percent to the slugging. This makes the theoretical max for OPS: 5.000, unlike other stats where 1.000 is generally the max.
On-Base plus Slugging percentage. On-Base percentage is the hits+walks/plate appearances (note that reaching on an error does not count towards OBP) Slugging percentage is total bases on hits / at-bats (which means walks and sacrifices don't count towards slugging) OPS is simply adding those two numbers together.