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  • Px/xpx

    Could you help me understand the difference between the two? If a player has a px of 86 and an xpx of 107, how do I translate that

  • #2
    Let's start with the definitions:

    Expected Power Index (xPX)
    2.6 + 269*HHLD% + 724*HHFB%

    Previous research has shown that hard-hit balls are more likely to result in hits and hard-hit fly balls are more likely to end up as HRs. As such, we can use hard-hit ball data to calculate an expected skills-based power index. This metric starts with hard hit ball data, which measures a player’s fundamental skill of making solid contact, and then places it on the same scale as PX (xPX). In the above formula, HHLD% is calculated as the number
    of hard hit-line drives divided by the total number of balls put in play. HHFB% is similarly calculated for fly balls.
    Linear weighted power (LWPwr)
    ((Doubles x .8) + (Triples x .8) + (HR x 1.4)) / (At bats- K) x 100​

    (PX is LwPwr divided by League Avg LwPwr)
    Basically, PX is the "actual stat"... you get more PX by hitting doubles, triples, HR.

    xPX is the "underlying skill". You get more xPX by hitting hard-hit line drives and hard-hit fly balls.


    So, if your PX is below your xPX, it means you're hitting less extra base hits than we would expect based on the amount of hard-hit fly balls and line drives you've hit.

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    • #3
      Thank you!

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