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  1. Dec 12, 2014 · Ground ball pitchers typically do a little better on average but there are plenty of terrific fly ball pitchers as well. You can make more mistakes on balls in play if you have a high strikeout rate or a low walk rate, too, but those are related to the quality of contact you allow. And quality of contact is really what it comes down to.

  2. Jun 2, 2014 · In a practical sense, if you have a pitcher with a 4.20 ERA and 3.20 FIP and you see a .400 BABIP, you're going to trust the FIP. Same is true if it's a 2.00 ERA and 3.40 FIP with a.220 BABIP.

    • Neil Weinberg
  3. Definition. Fly-ball rate represents the percentage of balls hit into the field of play that are characterized as fly balls. Each ball that is hit into the field of play is characterized as a line drive, a fly ball, a ground ball or a pop-up. (A fly ball is a fly to the outfield, while a pop-up is hit to the infield.) Fly-ball rate can be used ...

  4. Feb 17, 2010 · In other words, a pitcher with a 55% ground ball rate will have a lower BABIP on grounders than a pitcher with a 45% ground ball rate. And if a pitcher walks a large number of batters and also has a high ground ball rate, their double-play rate will be higher as well. As for fly balls, pitchers with a high fly ball rate will have a lower Home ...

  5. Mar 27, 2024 · Let’s put together a hypothetical game line for two pitchers. Pitcher A) 50 percent fly ball rate, 7 innings pitched, 28 batters faced, 5 strikeouts, 1 walk = 22 balls hit. At a 50 percent fly ball rate, he will allow 11 fly balls in that game. At a 10 percent HR/FB rate, he can be expected to allow 1.1 home runs per game.

  6. Feb 19, 2010 · Home Run to Fly Ball rate (HR/FB) is the ratio of how many home runs are hit against a pitcher for every fly ball they allow. Home runs are obviously not good for a pitcher, and a pitcher can reduce the number of home runs hit against them in two ways: by increasing their ground ball rate (therefore lowering their fly ball rate), or by reducing their HR/FB ratio.

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  8. GB% = Ground Balls / Balls in Play. LD% = Line Drives / Balls in Play. FB% = Fly Balls / Balls in Play. IFFB% = Infield Fly Balls / Fly Balls. Note that the first three statistics are divided by balls in play, while IFFB% is divided only by the number of fly balls specifically. Each time the ball is put in play, a statistics service such as ...

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