Plate appearances with 739 and base hits with 219.
For batters that had at least 10 plate appearances against Palmer, that was Fran Healy who went 5 for 8 with 4 walks for a .625 batting average. For batters that had at least 20 plate appearances against Palmer, that was Al Oliver who went 11 for 23 for a .478 batting average. For batters that had at least 50 plate appearances against Palmer, that was Doug Griffin who went 17 for 47 with 6 walks for a .362 batting average. For batters that had at least 100 plate appearances against Palmer, that was Rod Carew who when 34 for 95 with 10 walks for a .358 batting average.
Well obviously, many, many relief pitchers have had 0 RBI in a season. The record for everyday players (min. 502 plate appearances) is held by San Diego's Enzo Hernandez, who, despite playing in 143 games in 1971, managed only 12 (TWELVE!) RBI's that year.
batting for average means when you go up to bat. its basically an average of how many hits u get out of how many plate appearances you have
The single postseason batting average leader is Lloyd McClendon with 16 plate appearances, he batted .727 in the 1992 postseason.
Through the 2009 season, that is Ichiro Suzuki of the Seattle Mariners with 762 plate appearances in the 2004 season.
The number of plate appearances a batter can have in a season is totally dependent upon the number of games the team plays in a season, and if a player played the entire game in each of them. In Major League Baseball, each team plays 162 games. There are a minimum of 27 plate appearances for each team, so each position in the batting order would have a minimum of three plate appearances. (However, if the home team is ahead, they do not bat in the bottom of the 9th inning, so they would have potentially fewer plate appearances in those games, but let's ignore that for this exercise.) So, if a single, individual player played all nine innings of all 162 games, and came up to bat a minimum of 3 times per game, he would have a minimum of 486 plate appearances at the end of the season. Plate appearances are not the same thing as at-bats. If the batter reaches bases on a walk or is hit by a pitch, or if he sacrifices, it is a plate appearance, but it doesn't count as an at-bat in the statistics. According to baseball-reference.com, Hank Aaron averaged 606 plate appearances and 538 at-bats a season over his 23 season career, while Cal Ripken, Jr. averaged 613 plate appearances and 550 at-bats per season over the course of his 21 season career. These guys were both iron men, and probably averaged more plate appearances than current players do, but it's a good comparison. ----------
Yes. Derek Jeter played in 156 games and had 714 plate appearances in the 2007 season.
That has never occurred with a player that was a starter and qualified for a batting title in a season. The highest plate appearance/lowest strikeouts was achieved by Joe Sewell of the 1925 Cleveland Indians who had 699 plate appearances and struckout 4 times. Sewell was the toughest player to strikeout in MLB history. In 8,329 career plate appearances he struckout only 114 times. In 1929, he played in 115 consecutive games between May 17 and September 19 without striking out, an MLB record. That season he had 672 plate appearances and 4 strikeouts.
To qualify for a batting title, a player must have 502 plate appearances in a season. Through games played on May 30, Mauer has 122 and the Twins have 111 games left in the season. Barring injury, he should have no problem getting the remaining 380 plate appearances he needs to qualify.
No, neither post- nor preseason stats count towards season stats. Preseason stats aren't counted for much of anything at all. Post season stats are recorded separately.
As an example for the 2010 season ... Derek Jeter, who led the AL in plate appearances with 739, batted against 212 different pitchers. He faced 70 of those pitchers only once and another 33 only twice. Jeter had 10 or more plate appearances against 16 pitchers. Richie Weeks, who led the NL in plate appearances with 754, batted against 227 different pitchers. He faced 73 of those pitchers only once and another 31 only twice. Weeks had 10 or more plate appearances against 10 pitchers.
For the 2009 season, through games played on May 12 and for players with at least 100 plate appearances, that is Michael Young at .344. Omar Vizquel is batting .371 but has only 39 plate appearances. The best batting average in franchise history is .319 by Al Oliver who played with the Rangers between 1978-1981.
3 Plate appearances, 3 hits.
For batters it is average runs per plate appearances showing offensive productivity. About 15 ways to measure it these days. Simplest is: (runs+RBI -HR)/plate appearances. Careful not to confuse PA with at-bats!
To qualify for the batting title, a major league player needs 3.1 plate appearances per game played. In a standard 162 game season, that comes out to 502 plate appearances. For a pitcher to qualify to the ERA title he needs one inning per game played.
Generally 400 but the amount has varied as the number of games played changes. For instance George Brett won the batting title with a .390 average in a strike shortened season. Nevertheless walks do not count, since they do not count as at bats. In the early 70s a player lost the batting crown with 399 at bats when 400 were required. This rule has changed however. Now, a player just short of the required at bats could ADD the number of hitless at bats (generally meaning walks) to the number of at bats which will permit the player to still win the batting crown as long as the average does not drop below the player just below him. ---- To win a batting title in MLB, a batter must have a minimum of 502 total plate appearences for the season. Yes, any at bat that results in a non-official at bat (walk, sacrifice, hit by pitch) counts towards the total number of plate appearances.