Log In
Chat Memberships

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.
.776 OPS
AVG .246
OBP .329
SLG .447
HR 8
AB 199
H 49
RBI 29
.776 OPS
AVG .278
OBP .332
SLG .444
HR 8
AB 223
H 62
RBI 28
.775 OPS
AVG .325
OBP .325
SLG .450
HR 1
AB 40
H 13
RBI 6
Bryan Reynolds headshot
vs. Left
.775 OPS
AVG .257
OBP .335
SLG .439
HR 6
AB 148
H 38
RBI 17
James Wood headshot
Home
.775 OPS
AVG .233
OBP .329
SLG .446
HR 15
AB 296
H 69
RBI 47
Jung Hoo Lee headshot
vs. Right
.774 OPS
AVG .276
OBP .346
SLG .428
HR 5
AB 402
H 111
RBI 38
.774 OPS
AVG .263
OBP .300
SLG .474
HR 1
AB 19
H 5
RBI 1
TJ Friedl headshot
Day
.774 OPS
AVG .272
OBP .382
SLG .392
HR 5
AB 217
H 59
RBI 23
Xander Bogaerts headshot
vs. Left
.774 OPS
AVG .292
OBP .345
SLG .429
HR 3
AB 154
H 45
RBI 18
.774 OPS
AVG .268
OBP .325
SLG .449
HR 7
AB 205
H 55
RBI 33
Yoan Moncada headshot
Night
.774 OPS
AVG .227
OBP .314
SLG .460
HR 11
AB 211
H 48
RBI 31
.774 OPS
AVG .283
OBP .328
SLG .447
HR 7
AB 159
H 45
RBI 29
.773 OPS
AVG .284
OBP .320
SLG .453
HR 2
AB 95
H 27
RBI 5
.773 OPS
AVG .242
OBP .316
SLG .458
HR 12
AB 236
H 57
RBI 31
.773 OPS
AVG .300
OBP .373
SLG .400
HR 0
AB 60
H 18
RBI 4
.773 OPS
AVG .253
OBP .330
SLG .443
HR 4
AB 79
H 20
RBI 13
.773 OPS
AVG .269
OBP .332
SLG .441
HR 6
AB 186
H 50
RBI 21
Brandon Nimmo headshot
vs. Right
.773 OPS
AVG .263
OBP .327
SLG .447
HR 17
AB 403
H 106
RBI 62
.773 OPS
AVG .258
OBP .288
SLG .485
HR 6
AB 97
H 25
RBI 19
.773 OPS
AVG .226
OBP .338
SLG .435
HR 7
AB 115
H 26
RBI 15
.773 OPS
AVG .300
OBP .359
SLG .414
HR 5
AB 220
H 66
RBI 32
.772 OPS
AVG .281
OBP .334
SLG .438
HR 10
AB 331
H 93
RBI 34
.772 OPS
AVG .232
OBP .293
SLG .478
HR 4
AB 69
H 16
RBI 11
TY France headshot
Night
.772 OPS
AVG .294
OBP .355
SLG .417
HR 5
AB 235
H 69
RBI 29
Luis Garcia headshot
Night
.772 OPS
AVG .271
OBP .307
SLG .465
HR 12
AB 284
H 77
RBI 43
TJ Friedl headshot
vs. Right
.772 OPS
AVG .268
OBP .378
SLG .394
HR 10
AB 406
H 109
RBI 40
Brent Rooker headshot
Night
.772 OPS
AVG .245
OBP .329
SLG .444
HR 18
AB 428
H 105
RBI 60
.771 OPS
AVG .267
OBP .371
SLG .400
HR 1
AB 30
H 8
RBI 3
AVG .242
OBP .286
SLG .485
HR 4
AB 66
H 16
RBI 12
Alejandro Kirk headshot
vs. Right
.771 OPS
AVG .284
OBP .348
SLG .423
HR 11
AB 324
H 92
RBI 56
.770 OPS
AVG .273
OBP .326
SLG .444
HR 18
AB 414
H 113
RBI 54
Javier Baez headshot
vs. Left
.770 OPS
AVG .318
OBP .336
SLG .434
HR 2
AB 129
H 41
RBI 17
.770 OPS
AVG .244
OBP .369
SLG .401
HR 9
AB 217
H 53
RBI 26
Maikel Garcia headshot
vs. Right
.770 OPS
AVG .279
OBP .338
SLG .432
HR 13
AB 477
H 133
RBI 58
.770 OPS
AVG .320
OBP .370
SLG .400
HR 0
AB 25
H 8
RBI 2
.770 OPS
AVG .258
OBP .295
SLG .475
HR 7
AB 120
H 31
RBI 22
Brett Harris headshot
vs. Right
.769 OPS
AVG .304
OBP .377
SLG .391
HR 0
AB 46
H 14
RBI 4
Jake Bauers headshot
vs. Right
.769 OPS
AVG .238
OBP .358
SLG .411
HR 7
AB 168
H 40
RBI 25
.769 OPS
AVG .267
OBP .315
SLG .453
HR 2
AB 86
H 23
RBI 9
.769 OPS
AVG .247
OBP .322
SLG .447
HR 8
AB 215
H 53
RBI 26
.769 OPS
AVG .240
OBP .309
SLG .460
HR 2
AB 50
H 12
RBI 9
.768 OPS
AVG .265
OBP .297
SLG .471
HR 2
AB 34
H 9
RBI 7
Jeremy Pena headshot
vs. Left
.768 OPS
AVG .278
OBP .346
SLG .423
HR 4
AB 97
H 27
RBI 14
Jasson Dominguez headshot
vs. Right
.768 OPS
AVG .274
OBP .348
SLG .420
HR 9
AB 288
H 79
RBI 39
.768 OPS
AVG .229
OBP .324
SLG .444
HR 11
AB 223
H 51
RBI 31
Ryan McMahon headshot
Night
.768 OPS
AVG .231
OBP .332
SLG .436
HR 16
AB 312
H 72
RBI 38
.768 OPS
AVG .289
OBP .363
SLG .405
HR 5
AB 232
H 67
RBI 22
.768 OPS
AVG .226
OBP .360
SLG .409
HR 5
AB 93
H 21
RBI 19
.767 OPS
AVG .239
OBP .324
SLG .443
HR 3
AB 88
H 21
RBI 14
.767 OPS
AVG .270
OBP .308
SLG .459
HR 1
AB 74
H 20
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.
7 DAYS FREE
Start Trial →