Posted by
John Dewan
on Dec 16th 2015
December 08, 2004
OPS is an acronym for On-base Plus Slugging. Two of the best individual statistics for measuring offensive performance are on-base percentage and slugging average. On-base percentage measures how often a player gets on base. Slugging average measures how often a hitter turns his hits into extra bases. Each of these two statistics taken by itself are a better measure of a player’s offensive ability than the most commonly known baseball statistic, batting average (hits divided by official at bats). When added together to form OPS, it becomes the single best easily-calculated offensive statistic.
Based on their OPS at the all-star break, the National League team should have been: - C Mike Piazza (.894 OPS)
- 1B Jim Thome (1.124)
- 2B Todd Walker (.872)
- 3B Scott Rolen (1.037)
- SS Jack Wilson (.847)
- OF Barry Bonds (1.381)
- OFLance Berkman (1.064)
- OF Bobby Abreu (1.007)
The team voted by the fans actually was: - C Piazza
- 1B Albert Pujols (.987, ranked 4th at 1B)
- 2B Jeff Kent (.855, ranked 2nd)
- 3B Rolen
- SS Edgar Renteria (.723, ranked 4th)
- OF Bonds
- OFSammy Sosa (.927, ranked 6th)
- OF Ken Griffey Jr. (.851, ranked 14th)
As in the American League that year, the OPS leader was picked at only three positions. Jeff Kent was not a bad pick at second base; he ranked second and was quite close to the leader, Todd Walker. However, the other positions showed a clear popularity bias especially Sosa, Griffey and Pujols.