Total average
Total average is a baseball statistic devised by sportswriter Thomas Boswell and introduced in 1978. It was also described in his 1982 article "Welcome to the world of Total Average where a walk is as good as a hit". It is designed to measure a hitter's overall offensive contributions, on the basis that "all bases are created equal". The statistic was included in issues of Inside Sports.
The definition of the statistic is simple. A player gets a credit for every base accumulated and a penalty for every out made. So a player gets one credit for a single, walk, stolen base or being hit by a pitch; two for a double; three for a triple; and four for a home run. A player's total average is calculated by summing the accumulated bases and dividing by the number of outs the player makes.
Formula
When initially announced in an article in Inside Sports, the formula for total average was:Boswell revised the formula, which by 1981 had been modified to its final form:
where
- TA = Total average
- TB = Total bases
- HBP = Hit by pitch
- BB = Walks
- SB = Stolen base
- CS = Caught stealing
- AB = At bats
- H = Hits
- GIDP = Grounded into double play