OPS Calculator
Combine your On-Base Percentage and Slugging Percentage to find your complete offensive value.
At Bats (AB)
Total Hits (H)
Walks (BB)
Doubles (2B)
Hit By Pitch (HBP)
Triples (3B)
Sacrifice Flies (SF)
Home Runs (HR)
OPS Formula
OBP + SLG
Why OPS is the Ultimate Stat
For a long time, baseball analysts argued over whether getting on base (OBP) or hitting for power (SLG) was more important. OPS resolves this by simply adding them together!
- Complete Picture: A player with a high Batting Average but no power might have a great OBP but a low SLG. A pure power hitter might have a huge SLG but a terrible OBP. OPS rewards players who can do both.
- Benchmarks: An average MLB OPS is usually around .700 to .730. Hitting .800 makes you a very good player. Reaching .900 makes you a superstar.
- The 1.000 Club: An OPS of 1.000 or higher over a full season is incredibly rare and almost guarantees a player will be in the MVP conversation (think Aaron Judge or Shohei Ohtani).
- Did you know? Babe Ruth holds the highest career OPS in Major League history with an untouchable 1.164. Barry Bonds holds the single-season record with a staggering 1.421 in 2004!