"At least 502 official at bats are needed to qualify for a batting title. MLB uses a calculation of (number of games * 3.1) to determine the number. Since a full major season consists of 162 games, 162 multiplied by 3.1 equals 502."
This is incorrect. MLB requires this many Plate Appearances to qualify, not at bats. A player could theoretically go 1-1, then get 501 walks, hit by pitches, and sacrifices to qualify.
The correct answer for minimum AT BATS, to qualify: is 1.
Even taking aside the semantics of PAs vs ABs, a player can still win the batting title with fewer than 502 PAs. If his average is high enough, that theoretically adding on extra outs till he would reach 502 and STILL be highest, he can still win it. [Or any other PA based stat like OBP, SLG, OPS]
Milt Pappas - 132 career hits in 1073 at bats, for a cool .123 batting average
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A batting average of .420 refers to getting a base hit in 42% of your at bats. So you would need 42 hits for every hundred at bats. No Major League Baseball player has hit this high since 1924, when Rogers Hornsby hit .424.
Maybe 3 or 4 at least!
For an MLB batting title, yes. In 1907, Cobb led the AL and Wagner led the NL with averages of .350. When not rounding the number of decimal points in the batting average Cobb had the better average. Cobb had 212 hits in 605 at bats for a .3504 average and Wagner had 180 hits in 515 at bats for a .3495 batting average which rounds to .350.
Milt Pappas - 132 career hits in 1073 at bats, for a cool .123 batting average
they way just as much as major league bats there is no difference just because its a different league
No.
major league bats are hollow on top because it helps to even out the weight when you swing, making your hits better
In 2012, Brandon League played in 46 games for the Seattle Mariners, batting in of them. He had 0 at bats. In 2012, Brandon League played in 28 games for the Los Angeles Dodgers, batting in of them. He had 0 at bats.
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Visiting team
234
maple
A batting average of .420 refers to getting a base hit in 42% of your at bats. So you would need 42 hits for every hundred at bats. No Major League Baseball player has hit this high since 1924, when Rogers Hornsby hit .424.
Somebody batting a thousand had a base hit in each of his or her at bats. Baseball statistics that call themselves percentages are generally out of 1,000, not 100. Batting average is the number of hits per thousand at bats. So somebody batting three hundred has 300 hits per 1,000 at bats, and somebody batting 1,000 has 1,000 hits per thousand at bats. Since 1941 no Major League Baseball player has ever hit over 400 in a full season.
Most MLB players use Nike Sphere Batting Gloves or Mizuno Vintage Fit Batting Gloves.