Knowledge (XXG)

Average and over

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In 1870, most teams began presenting these statistics in decimal form. Continuing the examples above, the player with 29 runs in nine games would have this reported as an average of 3.22 Runs per game. The man called out 17 times in eight games would have an average Hands Lost of 2.12.
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a player scored per game, expressed as a whole number and a remainder. If a player scored 29 runs in nine games, his average runs per game would be three, with two left over. This would be written as 3,2.
140:. They referred to a player's average performance over a number of games, and were among the first baseball statistics ever reported and tracked. The term and the reporting method were borrowed from 168:, divided by the number of games he played, once again expressed as a whole number and a remainder. If a player was called out 17 times in eight games, his average and over for 137: 196:
Wright, Marshall. D. "The National Association of Base Ball Players, 1857-1870." Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc.: 2000.
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The basic statistic was presented as a whole number (the "average") and a remainder (the "over").
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were introduced in 1868, their totals were expressed in the same way.
26: 57:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 8: 132:, often abbreviated A&O, refers to two 138:National Association of Base Ball Players 117:Learn how and when to remove this message 164:was the number of times a player was 7: 55:adding citations to reliable sources 136:used in the 1850s and 1860s by the 25: 31: 42:needs additional citations for 1: 162:Average and over (hands lost) 18:Average and over (hands lost) 233: 153:was the average number of 151:Average and over (runs) 175:When statistics for 51:improve this article 134:baseball statistics 217:Batting statistics 66:"Average and over" 127: 126: 119: 101: 16:(Redirected from 224: 130:Average and over 122: 115: 111: 108: 102: 100: 59: 35: 27: 21: 232: 231: 227: 226: 225: 223: 222: 221: 207: 206: 193: 123: 112: 106: 103: 60: 58: 48: 36: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 230: 228: 220: 219: 209: 208: 205: 204: 192: 189: 172:would be 2,1. 125: 124: 39: 37: 30: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 229: 218: 215: 214: 212: 203: 202:0-7864-0779-4 199: 195: 194: 190: 188: 184: 182: 178: 173: 171: 167: 163: 159: 156: 152: 148: 145: 143: 139: 135: 131: 121: 118: 110: 99: 96: 92: 89: 85: 82: 78: 75: 71: 68: –  67: 63: 62:Find sources: 56: 52: 46: 45: 40:This article 38: 34: 29: 28: 19: 185: 174: 161: 160: 150: 149: 146: 129: 128: 113: 107:October 2010 104: 94: 87: 80: 73: 61: 49:Please help 44:verification 41: 181:total bases 191:References 170:hands lost 166:called out 77:newspapers 211:Category 142:cricket 91:scholar 200:  93:  86:  79:  72:  64:  98:JSTOR 84:books 198:ISBN 179:and 177:hits 155:runs 70:news 53:by 213:: 144:. 120:) 114:( 109:) 105:( 95:· 88:· 81:· 74:· 47:. 20:)

Index

Average and over (hands lost)

verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Average and over"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message
baseball statistics
National Association of Base Ball Players
cricket
runs
called out
hands lost
hits
total bases
ISBN
0-7864-0779-4
Category
Batting statistics

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