Plate appearance

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(Redirected from Plate appearances)

Every time a batter completes a turn batting, he is credited with a plate appearance (PA). A player is considered to have completed a turn batting when he reaches base safely via a hit, fielder's choice or an error, is awarded first base via a base on balls, hit by pitch or interference/obstruction (including catcher's interference), or is retired before reaching base. If a turn at the plate is interrupted by an inning ending on a caught stealing or other similar event that prevents the completion of the batter's turn at the plate, then no PA is charged and the batter leads off the following inning with a fresh count. Similarly, if a game ends on a balk, the player who was batting at the time of the balk is not charged with a PA. If a batter is replaced during a time at the dish, the count at the time is he replaced is used to determine whether or not he is charged with a PA. For statistical purposes, plate appearances that result in a batter reaching base via obstruction or interference are ignored when calculating on-base percentage.

A plate appearance is different from an at bat, which is a sub-category of plate appearances and excludes certain outcomes including, but not limited to, a base on balls or hit by pitch. The number of at bats is used to calculate batting average and slugging percentage, while the number of plate appearances is used to calculate a batter's on-base percentage (noting the aforementioned exclusions).

Theoretically, a single plate appearance could last forever, as it continues as long as the batter keeps fouling off pitches until the ball is put-in-play, or he is hit by a pitch, or a pitch goes untouched and is either called strike three or ball four by the umpire, ending the plate appearance. In practice, the longest plate appearance recorded since 1988, when precise pitch counts were first kept, lasted 21 pitches: Brandon Belt faced off against Jaime Barria on April 22, 2018, before flying out to right field. In fact, any plate appearance that takes 10 pitches or more to complete is already considered unusually long.

All Time Leaders
Span Player Total Notes
Career Pete Rose 15861
Season Jimmy Rollins 778 2007

Further Reading[edit]

  • Chad Thornburg and Matt Kelly: "Here are the longest MLB at-bats on record: Belt's 21-pitch battle with Barria tops all ABs since 1988", mlb.com, September 8, 2020. [1]
  • Brian Yonushonis: "The Infinitely Long MLB Plate Appearance, SABR, Volume 40, Number 1 (Spring 2011), pp. 103-107.