Tom Kane Career OPS Overview
Tom Kane's OPS was 0.5 for his 1-year Major League Baseball career.
1938 was his best season when his OPS was 0.5 and his worst season was 1938
when his OPS was 0.5. Tom Kane underperformed similar player cohorts when comparing career totals, not
beating USA (0.677456), The Greatest Generation (0.684497), Y (0.824577), mlb (0.677282), and 2B (0.651231) player career averages. See the charts and graphs below that
visualize this information in more detail.
On Base Plus Slugging (OPS) is a metric used to quantify a players hitting power and ability to get on base. It's caluclated by summing the slugging percentage and on base percentage for a player or team over a given time period. Generally, for OPS, higher is better. (
Source)
Tom Kane Lifetime OPS
Stats similar to OPS for Tom Kane
| Tom KaneOPS |
---|
Career | 0.5 |
Season Avg. | 0.5 |
162 Game Avg. | 0.5 |
More Info | See More |
Tom Kane OPS By Year Line Chart
This line chart shows Tom Kane's yearly OPS
for each season of his Major League Baseball career. Also included, for comparison,
are yearly player averages for MLB, Hall of Fame players, 2B, and players from their
country of birth. For these groups, averages are calculated for each group's performance for the defined year.
Tom Kane OPS By Year Change
This waterfall chart attempts to show how Tom Kane's career OPS changed per season.
This data is cumulative for each season, each column represents the career OPS Tom Kane
had at that season in his career.
Tom Kane OPS By Year Box Chart
This chart attempts to draw comparisons between Tom Kane and related player groups by summarizing OPS
for each season played by Tom Kane. The box represents the middle 50% of the data for each player with the line in the box
being the median value. The whiskers represent the ranges for the top and bottom 25% of the data. Review the spread and
medians to draw your conclusions!
Tom Kane OPS Per Season Stats Table
This table shows Tom Kane OPS stats per season for his full MLB career with the
aggregations’ sum, average, minimum, maximum, and median. Also included, for comparison, are season
player averages for MLB, Hall of Fame players,
2B, and players from their country of birth. The comparisons are calculated for each
group for each year of Tom Kane career.
Note: "—" indicate there were no players
for comparison for a specific year. Most commonly this happens for the hall of fame group where there may
not have been a hall of famer playing that year.