has the highest major-league career batting average (.371). He is also the most recent player to hit .400 in a season (1943). had a .440 average for the 1894 season. In modern times, a
season batting average of .300 or higher is considered to be excellent, and an average higher than .400 is a nearly unachievable goal. The last
Major League Baseball (MLB) player to do so, with enough
plate appearances to qualify for the batting championship, was
Ted Williams of the
Boston Red Sox, who hit .406 in 1941. entering the final day of the 1941 season, Williams was at 179-for-448, which is .39955 and would have been recorded as .400 via rounding. which is .40570 and becomes .406 when rounded. Since 1941, no
American League or
National League player has hit .400 or above—the highest single-season average in those leagues has been .394 by
Tony Gwynn of the
San Diego Padres in 1994.
Wade Boggs hit .401 over a 162-game span with Boston from June 9, 1985, to June 6, 1986, but never hit above .368 for an MLB season. There have been numerous attempts to explain the disappearance of the .400 hitter, with one of the more rigorous discussions of this question appearing in
Stephen Jay Gould's 1996 book
Full House.
Josh Gibson hit .466 in 1943 while playing for the
Homestead Grays of the
Negro National League, one of several leagues within
Negro league baseball that are now recognized by MLB. Gibson holds the record for highest major-league career batting average at .371, four points higher than
Ty Cobb, who has the second-highest career average at .367. The record for lowest career batting average for a player with more than 2,500 at-bats belongs to
Bill Bergen, a catcher who played from 1901 to 1911 and recorded a .170 average in 3,028 career at-bats.
Hugh Duffy, who played from 1888 to 1906, is credited with the highest single-season batting average, having hit .440 in 1894. The modern-era (post-1900) record for highest batting average for a season is held by
Nap Lajoie, who hit .426 in 1901, While finishing six plate appearances short of qualifying for the batting title,
Adam Dunn of the
Chicago White Sox hit .159 for the 2011 season, nine points lower than the record. The highest batting average for a
rookie was .408 in 1911 by
Shoeless Joe Jackson. The league batting average in MLB for the
2018 season was .248, with the highest modern-era MLB average being .296 in 1930, and the lowest being .237 in 1968. For non-pitchers, a batting average below .230 is often considered poor, and one below .200 is usually unacceptable. This latter level is sometimes referred to as "The
Mendoza Line", named for
Mario Mendoza—a lifetime .215 hitter but a good defensive shortstop.
Sabermetrics, the study of
baseball statistics, considers batting average a weak measure of performance because it does not correlate as well as other measures to runs scored, thereby causing it to have little predictive value. Batting average does not take into account
bases on balls (walks) or power, whereas other statistics such as
on-base percentage and
slugging percentage have been specifically designed to measure such concepts. Adding these statistics together form a player's
on-base plus slugging or "OPS". This is commonly seen as a much better, though not perfect, indicator of a player's overall batting ability as it is a measure of hitting for average, hitting for power, and drawing walks.
Anomalies finished his brief major-league career with a 1.000 batting average. In ,
bases on balls (walks) were counted as hits by the major leagues in existence at the time. This inflated batting averages, with 11 players batting .400 or better, and the experiment was abandoned the following season. Historical statistics for the season were later revised, such that "Bases on balls shall always be treated as neither a time at bat nor a hit for the batter."
1.000 career average In rare instances, players have concluded their careers with a perfect batting average of 1.000—through the 2021 season, there were 94 such players in major-league history, 83 of whom recorded exactly one hit in one at bat. Only one player with a 1.000 average has had three hits—outfielder
John Paciorek (1963), who had three hits in three at bats; he also had two walks, and scored four runs. Players who had two hits in their only two at bats include: pitcher
Frank O'Connor (1893), catcher
Mike Hopkins (1902), pitcher
Doc Tonkin (1907), pitcher
Hal Deviney (1920), pitcher
Fred Schemanske (1923), pitcher
Chet Kehn (1942), second baseman
Steve Biras (1944), and pitcher
Jason Roach (2003). Pitcher
Esteban Yan, who played in 472 major-league games from 1996 to 2006, mainly in the
American League (where pitchers have rarely batted since the introduction of the
designated hitter in 1973), also had two hits in his only two at bats, one a home run. ==Qualifications for the batting title==