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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.
Evan Carter headshot
vs. Left
.337 OPS
AVG .087
OBP .250
SLG .087
HR 0
AB 23
H 2
RBI 1
Jacob Melton headshot
vs. Left
.343 OPS
AVG .143
OBP .200
SLG .143
HR 0
AB 14
H 2
RBI 1
.345 OPS
AVG .121
OBP .180
SLG .165
HR 1
AB 91
H 11
RBI 4
Blake Dunn headshot
Home
.349 OPS
AVG .071
OBP .278
SLG .071
HR 0
AB 28
H 2
RBI 0
.350 OPS
AVG .100
OBP .250
SLG .100
HR 0
AB 10
H 1
RBI 1
.356 OPS
AVG .067
OBP .222
SLG .133
HR 0
AB 15
H 1
RBI 3
Jace Jung headshot
vs. Right
.356 OPS
AVG .111
OBP .245
SLG .111
HR 0
AB 45
H 5
RBI 3
David Hamilton headshot
vs. Left
.358 OPS
AVG .158
OBP .200
SLG .158
HR 0
AB 19
H 3
RBI 2
Jace Jung headshot
Day
.358 OPS
AVG .158
OBP .200
SLG .158
HR 0
AB 19
H 3
RBI 3
Jace Jung headshot
Home
.361 OPS
AVG .111
OBP .250
SLG .111
HR 0
AB 27
H 3
RBI 2
.362 OPS
AVG .100
OBP .229
SLG .133
HR 0
AB 30
H 3
RBI 1
Jorbit Vivas headshot
Night
.368 OPS
AVG .108
OBP .233
SLG .135
HR 0
AB 37
H 4
RBI 0
Rece Hinds headshot
Away
.370 OPS
AVG .083
OBP .120
SLG .250
HR 1
AB 24
H 2
RBI 2
.375 OPS
AVG .125
OBP .125
SLG .250
HR 1
AB 24
H 3
RBI 2
.380 OPS
AVG .140
OBP .169
SLG .211
HR 1
AB 57
H 8
RBI 4
.387 OPS
AVG .118
OBP .250
SLG .137
HR 0
AB 51
H 6
RBI 0
.389 OPS
AVG .111
OBP .111
SLG .278
HR 1
AB 18
H 2
RBI 1
Kris Bryant headshot
Night
.391 OPS
AVG .174
OBP .174
SLG .217
HR 0
AB 23
H 4
RBI 0
.393 OPS
AVG .143
OBP .250
SLG .143
HR 0
AB 84
H 12
RBI 5
Drew Gilbert headshot
Night
.398 OPS
AVG .117
OBP .182
SLG .217
HR 1
AB 60
H 7
RBI 6
Kyle Karros headshot
vs. Left
.399 OPS
AVG .129
OBP .206
SLG .194
HR 0
AB 31
H 4
RBI 0
Oneil Cruz headshot
vs. Left
.400 OPS
AVG .102
OBP .224
SLG .176
HR 1
AB 108
H 11
RBI 8
Colt Keith headshot
vs. Left
.403 OPS
AVG .163
OBP .217
SLG .186
HR 0
AB 43
H 7
RBI 1
.403 OPS
AVG .161
OBP .196
SLG .207
HR 0
AB 87
H 14
RBI 8
Andres Chaparro headshot
vs. Right
.404 OPS
AVG .125
OBP .154
SLG .250
HR 1
AB 24
H 3
RBI 2
Zack Gelof headshot
Home
.404 OPS
AVG .145
OBP .194
SLG .210
HR 1
AB 62
H 9
RBI 5
.404 OPS
AVG .152
OBP .192
SLG .212
HR 1
AB 99
H 15
RBI 6
.405 OPS
AVG .137
OBP .228
SLG .176
HR 0
AB 51
H 7
RBI 2
.408 OPS
AVG .155
OBP .222
SLG .186
HR 1
AB 161
H 25
RBI 9
.410 OPS
AVG .125
OBP .222
SLG .188
HR 0
AB 16
H 2
RBI 1
.411 OPS
AVG .152
OBP .216
SLG .196
HR 0
AB 46
H 7
RBI 4
Alejandro Osuna headshot
vs. Left
.413 OPS
AVG .091
OBP .231
SLG .182
HR 0
AB 11
H 1
RBI 2
Grant McCray headshot
vs. Right
.413 OPS
AVG .111
OBP .190
SLG .222
HR 0
AB 18
H 2
RBI 2
.418 OPS
AVG .127
OBP .196
SLG .222
HR 3
AB 126
H 16
RBI 10
.419 OPS
AVG .143
OBP .133
SLG .286
HR 0
AB 14
H 2
RBI 2
.421 OPS
AVG .162
OBP .223
SLG .198
HR 1
AB 111
H 18
RBI 7
.423 OPS
AVG .135
OBP .179
SLG .243
HR 1
AB 37
H 5
RBI 4
.424 OPS
AVG .129
OBP .263
SLG .161
HR 0
AB 31
H 4
RBI 1
.424 OPS
AVG .152
OBP .152
SLG .273
HR 0
AB 33
H 5
RBI 5
.425 OPS
AVG .133
OBP .172
SLG .253
HR 2
AB 83
H 11
RBI 7
.425 OPS
AVG .137
OBP .220
SLG .205
HR 1
AB 73
H 10
RBI 4
Connor Joe headshot
vs. Left
.426 OPS
AVG .147
OBP .250
SLG .176
HR 0
AB 34
H 5
RBI 2
.428 OPS
AVG .151
OBP .258
SLG .170
HR 0
AB 53
H 8
RBI 4
.429 OPS
AVG .214
OBP .214
SLG .214
HR 0
AB 14
H 3
RBI 1
Nick Allen headshot
Home
.430 OPS
AVG .166
OBP .231
SLG .199
HR 0
AB 181
H 30
RBI 10
.430 OPS
AVG .133
OBP .217
SLG .213
HR 2
AB 75
H 10
RBI 5
Zack Gelof headshot
Night
.432 OPS
AVG .151
OBP .213
SLG .219
HR 1
AB 73
H 11
RBI 6
.432 OPS
AVG .100
OBP .182
SLG .250
HR 1
AB 20
H 2
RBI 2
Will Wagner headshot
vs. Left
.433 OPS
AVG .167
OBP .211
SLG .222
HR 0
AB 18
H 3
RBI 0
.433 OPS
AVG .107
OBP .219
SLG .214
HR 1
AB 28
H 3
RBI 4

Understanding Platoon Splits

Platoon splits — performance vs left-handed pitchers (LHP) and right-handed pitchers (RHP) — are the single most predictive and actionable batting split. Most hitters have a significant platoon gap, performing better against opposite-hand pitchers.

The Platoon Advantage

Right-handed hitters typically hit 30-50 OPS points better against LHP, and vice versa. The platoon advantage exists because same-hand pitcher-batter matchups create a more difficult pitch angle and make breaking balls move away from the hitter. This is the most stable, repeatable split in baseball.

Switch Hitters & Exceptions

Switch hitters aim to always have the platoon advantage by batting from both sides. However, many switch hitters are significantly better from one side. Some pure hitters (like elite LHH who crush lefties) defy platoon norms entirely — always check the data rather than assuming.

Props & DFS Application

Platoon splits are the #1 factor for daily fantasy and prop betting. Always check the opposing starter's handedness, then look at each hitter's platoon split. A .280 overall hitter who hits .320 vs LHP is a strong play when a lefty is on the mound — the line is set off his overall average, not his split.

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

What is the platoon advantage in baseball?
The platoon advantage means hitters perform better against opposite-hand pitchers. Right-handed hitters (RHH) tend to hit better against left-handed pitchers (LHP), and left-handed hitters (LHH) hit better against right-handed pitchers (RHP). The typical platoon gap is 30-50 OPS points, making it the most reliable and predictive split in baseball.
How important are platoon splits for DFS?
Platoon splits are the single most important split for DFS. Always check the opposing starter's handedness before building lineups. Stack right-handed hitters against left-handed starters (and vice versa) for the strongest correlation. The platoon edge is especially large for power stats like HR and SLG.
Are platoon splits reliable with small sample sizes?
Yes — platoon splits are the most stable split category even with relatively small samples. Because the platoon advantage is driven by physics (pitch angle, breaking ball movement), it tends to persist even in 50-100 at-bat samples. This makes platoon splits usable earlier in the season than other split types.
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