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MLB Batting Splits 2025

Performance splits by handedness, home/away, and situational categories.

Batting splits break down a hitter's performance across different game situations. Platoon splits (vs LHP/RHP) are the most predictive for DFS and prop betting. Minimum 10 at-bats displayed.
.563 OPS
AVG .250
OBP .250
SLG .313
HR 0
AB 16
H 4
RBI 3
.558 OPS
AVG .250
OBP .308
SLG .250
HR 0
AB 12
H 3
RBI 0
.545 OPS
AVG .273
OBP .273
SLG .273
HR 0
AB 11
H 3
RBI 0
.544 OPS
AVG .167
OBP .211
SLG .333
HR 1
AB 18
H 3
RBI 2
AVG .182
OBP .250
SLG .273
HR 0
AB 11
H 2
RBI 1
.500 OPS
AVG .200
OBP .200
SLG .300
HR 0
AB 10
H 2
RBI 1
.490 OPS
AVG .182
OBP .308
SLG .182
HR 0
AB 11
H 2
RBI 0
.481 OPS
AVG .167
OBP .231
SLG .250
HR 0
AB 12
H 2
RBI 3
.462 OPS
AVG .231
OBP .231
SLG .231
HR 0
AB 13
H 3
RBI 0
.455 OPS
AVG .182
OBP .182
SLG .273
HR 0
AB 11
H 2
RBI 1
.400 OPS
AVG .200
OBP .200
SLG .200
HR 0
AB 15
H 3
RBI 0
.397 OPS
AVG .167
OBP .231
SLG .167
HR 0
AB 12
H 2
RBI 2
.397 OPS
AVG .167
OBP .231
SLG .167
HR 0
AB 12
H 2
RBI 1
.381 OPS
AVG .083
OBP .214
SLG .167
HR 0
AB 12
H 1
RBI 1
.381 OPS
AVG .083
OBP .214
SLG .167
HR 0
AB 12
H 1
RBI 0
.364 OPS
AVG .182
OBP .182
SLG .182
HR 0
AB 11
H 2
RBI 0
.364 OPS
AVG .182
OBP .182
SLG .182
HR 0
AB 11
H 2
RBI 0
.356 OPS
AVG .136
OBP .174
SLG .182
HR 0
AB 22
H 3
RBI 1
.341 OPS
AVG .130
OBP .167
SLG .174
HR 0
AB 23
H 3
RBI 0
AVG .167
OBP .167
SLG .167
HR 0
AB 12
H 2
RBI 0
.333 OPS
AVG .133
OBP .133
SLG .200
HR 0
AB 15
H 2
RBI 1
.333 OPS
AVG .167
OBP .167
SLG .167
HR 0
AB 12
H 2
RBI 0
.300 OPS
AVG .100
OBP .100
SLG .200
HR 0
AB 10
H 1
RBI 0
.282 OPS
AVG .100
OBP .182
SLG .100
HR 0
AB 10
H 1
RBI 0
.237 OPS
AVG .083
OBP .154
SLG .083
HR 0
AB 12
H 1
RBI 0
.167 OPS
AVG .083
OBP .083
SLG .083
HR 0
AB 12
H 1
RBI 1
.167 OPS
AVG .083
OBP .083
SLG .083
HR 0
AB 12
H 1
RBI 0
.091 OPS
AVG .000
OBP .091
SLG .000
HR 0
AB 10
H 0
RBI 0
.077 OPS
AVG .000
OBP .077
SLG .000
HR 0
AB 12
H 0
RBI 0
.000 OPS
AVG .000
OBP .000
SLG .000
HR 0
AB 10
H 0
RBI 0
.000 OPS
AVG .000
OBP .000
SLG .000
HR 0
AB 12
H 0
RBI 0
.000 OPS
AVG .000
OBP .000
SLG .000
HR 0
AB 13
H 0
RBI 0

Understanding Ballpark Splits

Ballpark splits show how a hitter performs at each MLB stadium. Park dimensions, altitude, weather, and playing surface all influence offensive output. Coors Field in Colorado inflates stats dramatically, while pitcher-friendly parks like Oracle Park suppress them.

Hitter-Friendly Parks

Coors Field, Great American Ball Park, and Fenway Park consistently boost batting stats. Hitters at these venues often see 15-25% OPS increases. Always check ballpark splits before setting DFS lineups — a hitter visiting Coors is a different player than the same hitter at Petco Park.

Pitcher-Friendly Parks

Oracle Park, Petco Park, and Tropicana Field suppress offensive numbers. A .250 hitter at a pitcher-friendly park might actually be performing well relative to context. Use ballpark splits to normalize stats before comparing hitters across different home parks.

DFS & Betting Application

Stack hitters visiting hitter-friendly parks, especially when they have strong historical splits at that venue. For props, adjust your expectations based on park context — a 1.5 total bases over is more likely at Coors than at Oracle Park.

Data Source & Methodology

Batting splits sourced from MLB Stats API. Stats reflect current season data and update daily as games are played.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which MLB ballparks are best for hitters?
Coors Field (Colorado), Great American Ball Park (Cincinnati), and Fenway Park (Boston) are consistently the most hitter-friendly parks. Coors Field is the most extreme — hitters typically see OPS increases of 100+ points when playing there due to the altitude and thin air.
How do I use ballpark splits for DFS?
Target hitters who have strong historical performance at the day's venue. Stack hitters visiting Coors Field, Great American Ball Park, or other hitter-friendly parks. Fade hitters playing at pitcher-friendly venues like Oracle Park or Tropicana Field unless they have proven track records there.
Why do some hitters perform differently at certain parks?
Park dimensions (wall distances, fence heights), altitude (Coors Field), weather patterns, and playing surface all affect batted balls. Left-handed hitters may thrive at parks with short right-field porches, while fly-ball hitters benefit from thin air at altitude.
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