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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.
.409 OPS
AVG .127
OBP .172
SLG .236
HR 2
AB 55
H 7
RBI 2
.392 OPS
AVG .143
OBP .178
SLG .214
HR 1
AB 70
H 10
RBI 1
.378 OPS
AVG .113
OBP .190
SLG .189
HR 1
AB 53
H 6
RBI 1
.367 OPS
AVG .132
OBP .179
SLG .189
HR 1
AB 53
H 7
RBI 1
.353 OPS
AVG .118
OBP .163
SLG .191
HR 3
AB 152
H 18
RBI 3
.329 OPS
AVG .091
OBP .216
SLG .114
HR 0
AB 44
H 4
RBI 0
.325 OPS
AVG .079
OBP .167
SLG .158
HR 1
AB 38
H 3
RBI 1
.304 OPS
AVG .122
OBP .182
SLG .122
HR 0
AB 41
H 5
RBI 0
.286 OPS
AVG .071
OBP .071
SLG .214
HR 0
AB 14
H 1
RBI 0
.197 OPS
AVG .043
OBP .154
SLG .043
HR 0
AB 23
H 1
RBI 0
.182 OPS
AVG .091
OBP .091
SLG .091
HR 0
AB 11
H 1
RBI 0
.175 OPS
AVG .032
OBP .143
SLG .032
HR 0
AB 31
H 1
RBI 0
.167 OPS
AVG .000
OBP .167
SLG .000
HR 0
AB 10
H 0
RBI 0

Understanding Situational Splits

Situational splits capture a hitter's performance in high-leverage game contexts — runners in scoring position (RISP), two-out situations, and clutch at-bats. These splits reveal which hitters elevate their game when it matters most.

RISP (Runners in Scoring Position)

RISP splits show how a hitter performs with runners on 2nd and/or 3rd. Some hitters elevate with RISP while others tighten up. For prop betting, high RISP splits indicate a hitter who thrives under pressure and may exceed their base projections in run-producing situations.

Two-Out Situations

Two-out hitting is a specific skill. Hitters who maintain high averages with 2 outs extend innings and create run-scoring opportunities. The "scoring position, 2 out" split is the ultimate clutch metric — it captures rally-extending at-bats under maximum pressure.

DFS & Betting Value

Situational splits help identify "clutch" hitters whose RBI and run totals outpace their overall stat line. A hitter with elite RISP splits batting 4th or 5th in a potent lineup is a prime RBI prop target. These splits also help explain why some hitters consistently outperform their projections.

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

Is clutch hitting a real skill?
This is debated, but the evidence suggests that while most clutch performance is random variation, some hitters do have a repeatable ability to perform in high-leverage situations. Hitters with consistently high RISP splits across multiple seasons are more likely to have a real skill than those with one hot year.
How do I use RISP splits for prop betting?
Target hitters with strong RISP splits for RBI props, especially when they bat in the middle of a potent lineup. If the lineup around them gets on base frequently, a high-RISP hitter will have more opportunities to drive in runs. Combine with the opposing pitcher's RISP-allowed stats for the clearest edge.
What is the "scoring position, 2 out" split?
This is arguably the highest-pressure regular-season at-bat situation — runners on 2nd/3rd with 2 outs. Hitters who thrive here extend innings and produce outsized run totals. It's a small-sample split, so look for consistency across seasons rather than relying on one year's data.
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