St. Louis Terriers Slugging Pct Charts and Records
About Slugging Pct
Slugging percentage (SLG) is a measure of hitter production similar to batting average, but it weights extra base hits higher than singles instead of treating all hits equally. It is calculated by dividing total bases by at bats for a player or team over a given period. Generally, for Slugging Pct, higher is better. (Source)
Top St. Louis Terriers Players by Slugging Pct
Which St. Louis Terriers players rank highest in Slugging Pct? Below are the top ten by single season and by career totals with the team, requiring at least 75 plate appearances for a season record, or 150 plate appearances for a career record with the team.


St. Louis Terriers Slugging Pct Per Season
St. Louis Terriers's Slugging Pct for each season of their history, plotted alongside yearly averages for MLB, the Federal League, and the Federal League.

St. Louis Terriers Slugging Pct Season Distribution vs. MLB and Peers
Each box summarizes Slugging Pct across all seasons, comparing the St. Louis Terriers to MLB as a whole, the Federal League, and the Federal League. The box covers the middle 50% of seasons, the center line is the median, and the whiskers extend to the min and max values.

St. Louis Terriers Slugging Pct Year-Over-Year Change
A waterfall chart showing how the St. Louis Terriers's Slugging Pct shifted season over season. Each bar represents the change from the previous year, making it easy to spot peak and decline phases.

St. Louis Terriers Slugging Pct — Season-by-Season Breakdown
Every season of St. Louis Terriers's history with Slugging Pct alongside yearly averages for MLB, the Federal League, and the Federal League. Career totals include sum, average, minimum, maximum, and median.
