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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.
Nick Kurtz headshot
Away
.967 OPS
AVG .291
OBP .385
SLG .582
HR 14
AB 213
H 62
RBI 34
.964 OPS
AVG .265
OBP .405
SLG .559
HR 3
AB 34
H 9
RBI 7
Austin Wynns headshot
vs. Right
.964 OPS
AVG .313
OBP .352
SLG .612
HR 5
AB 67
H 21
RBI 17
Victor Mesa headshot
vs. Left
.964 OPS
AVG .300
OBP .364
SLG .600
HR 1
AB 10
H 3
RBI 3
.963 OPS
AVG .275
OBP .357
SLG .606
HR 10
AB 109
H 30
RBI 24
.963 OPS
AVG .351
OBP .413
SLG .550
HR 10
AB 242
H 85
RBI 31
Dillon Dingler headshot
vs. Left
.961 OPS
AVG .330
OBP .380
SLG .580
HR 5
AB 112
H 37
RBI 18
Rob Refsnyder headshot
vs. Left
.959 OPS
AVG .302
OBP .399
SLG .560
HR 7
AB 116
H 35
RBI 25
Zach Cole headshot
vs. Right
.958 OPS
AVG .282
OBP .317
SLG .641
HR 4
AB 39
H 11
RBI 11
James Wood headshot
Night
.955 OPS
AVG .301
OBP .393
SLG .562
HR 20
AB 329
H 99
RBI 57
.954 OPS
AVG .313
OBP .358
SLG .595
HR 22
AB 294
H 92
RBI 54
.953 OPS
AVG .367
OBP .404
SLG .548
HR 6
AB 166
H 61
RBI 18
.952 OPS
AVG .274
OBP .321
SLG .631
HR 13
AB 157
H 43
RBI 36
.951 OPS
AVG .277
OBP .397
SLG .554
HR 5
AB 65
H 18
RBI 24
Austin Hays headshot
vs. Left
.949 OPS
AVG .319
OBP .400
SLG .549
HR 2
AB 91
H 29
RBI 17
.948 OPS
AVG .339
OBP .413
SLG .536
HR 3
AB 56
H 19
RBI 8
.947 OPS
AVG .265
OBP .386
SLG .561
HR 20
AB 230
H 61
RBI 55
.946 OPS
AVG .303
OBP .348
SLG .598
HR 15
AB 234
H 71
RBI 46
.946 OPS
AVG .304
OBP .374
SLG .572
HR 20
AB 306
H 93
RBI 71
.946 OPS
AVG .326
OBP .428
SLG .519
HR 6
AB 135
H 44
RBI 24
.944 OPS
AVG .294
OBP .415
SLG .529
HR 2
AB 34
H 10
RBI 6
Matthew Lugo headshot
vs. Left
.941 OPS
AVG .353
OBP .353
SLG .588
HR 1
AB 17
H 6
RBI 4
.941 OPS
AVG .300
OBP .321
SLG .620
HR 3
AB 50
H 15
RBI 9
Giancarlo Stanton headshot
vs. Right
.940 OPS
AVG .272
OBP .332
SLG .609
HR 19
AB 184
H 50
RBI 42
.940 OPS
AVG .250
OBP .357
SLG .583
HR 1
AB 12
H 3
RBI 1
.939 OPS
AVG .282
OBP .355
SLG .585
HR 14
AB 195
H 55
RBI 37
.938 OPS
AVG .333
OBP .419
SLG .519
HR 1
AB 27
H 9
RBI 1
.936 OPS
AVG .315
OBP .333
SLG .603
HR 4
AB 73
H 23
RBI 12
.936 OPS
AVG .312
OBP .365
SLG .571
HR 5
AB 77
H 24
RBI 15
.936 OPS
AVG .335
OBP .420
SLG .516
HR 9
AB 221
H 74
RBI 29
.933 OPS
AVG .283
OBP .361
SLG .572
HR 11
AB 159
H 45
RBI 34
Jose Ramirez headshot
Night
.933 OPS
AVG .298
OBP .375
SLG .558
HR 22
AB 382
H 114
RBI 58
.932 OPS
AVG .323
OBP .384
SLG .548
HR 8
AB 124
H 40
RBI 16
JO Adell headshot
vs. Left
.931 OPS
AVG .277
OBP .346
SLG .585
HR 7
AB 94
H 26
RBI 18
Jonathan Aranda headshot
vs. Right
.930 OPS
AVG .329
OBP .398
SLG .531
HR 13
AB 286
H 94
RBI 51
Pete Alonso headshot
vs. Right
.929 OPS
AVG .291
OBP .362
SLG .567
HR 29
AB 443
H 129
RBI 103
Ben Rice headshot
Day
.927 OPS
AVG .260
OBP .368
SLG .558
HR 12
AB 154
H 40
RBI 30
Corey Seager headshot
vs. Right
.926 OPS
AVG .298
OBP .412
SLG .514
HR 13
AB 245
H 73
RBI 36
Yandy Diaz headshot
vs. Left
.922 OPS
AVG .285
OBP .365
SLG .557
HR 11
AB 158
H 45
RBI 21
Maikel Garcia headshot
vs. Left
.921 OPS
AVG .314
OBP .404
SLG .517
HR 3
AB 118
H 37
RBI 16
.921 OPS
AVG .293
OBP .346
SLG .575
HR 27
AB 379
H 111
RBI 63
.920 OPS
AVG .318
OBP .375
SLG .545
HR 3
AB 44
H 14
RBI 7
Cal Raleigh headshot
Night
.919 OPS
AVG .238
OBP .343
SLG .577
HR 39
AB 404
H 96
RBI 84
Taylor Ward headshot
vs. Left
.918 OPS
AVG .262
OBP .345
SLG .573
HR 7
AB 103
H 27
RBI 18
.915 OPS
AVG .268
OBP .362
SLG .553
HR 21
AB 291
H 78
RBI 54
Davis Schneider headshot
vs. Right
.915 OPS
AVG .259
OBP .384
SLG .531
HR 7
AB 81
H 21
RBI 16
.914 OPS
AVG .300
OBP .343
SLG .570
HR 25
AB 370
H 111
RBI 68
Drew Millas headshot
vs. Right
.914 OPS
AVG .351
OBP .400
SLG .514
HR 0
AB 37
H 13
RBI 5
.912 OPS
AVG .296
OBP .341
SLG .571
HR 23
AB 338
H 100
RBI 60
.912 OPS
AVG .274
OBP .332
SLG .580
HR 19
AB 226
H 62
RBI 42

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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