Isolated power

Sabermetric baseball statistic

In baseball, isolated power or ISO is a sabermetric computation used to measure a batter's raw power. One formula is slugging percentage minus batting average.

I S O = S L G A V G {\displaystyle ISO=SLG-AVG}

= T B H A B {\displaystyle ={\frac {{\mathit {TB}}-H}{AB}}}

= ( 1 B ) + ( 2 × 2 B ) + ( 3 × 3 B ) + ( 4 × H R ) A B H A B {\displaystyle ={\frac {({\mathit {1B}})+(2\times {\mathit {2B}})+(3\times {\mathit {3B}})+(4\times {\mathit {HR}})}{AB}}-{\frac {H}{AB}}}

= ( 1 B ) + ( 2 × 2 B ) + ( 3 × 3 B ) + ( 4 × H R ) ( 1 B + 2 B + 3 B + H R ) A B {\displaystyle ={\frac {({\mathit {1B}})+(2\times {\mathit {2B}})+(3\times {\mathit {3B}})+(4\times {\mathit {HR}})-({\mathit {1B}}+{\mathit {2B}}+{\mathit {3B}}+{\mathit {HR}})}{AB}}}

= ( 2 B ) + ( 2 × 3 B ) + ( 3 × H R ) A B {\displaystyle ={\frac {({\mathit {2B}})+(2\times {\mathit {3B}})+(3\times {\mathit {HR}})}{AB}}}

The final result measures how many extra bases a player averages per at bat. A player who hits only singles would thus have an ISO of 0. The maximum ISO is 3.000, and can only be attained by hitting a home run in every at-bat.

The term "isolated power" was coined by Bill James, but the concept dates back to Branch Rickey and his statistician Allan Roth.[1]

See also

  • PECOTA

References

  1. ^ McCue, Andy. "Allan Roth". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  • Baseball Prospectus Glossary
  • Baseball Simple : Isolated Power (ISO) Calculator
  • FanGraphs Sabermetrics Library
  • v
  • t
  • e
Baseball statistics
Batting
Base runningPitching
FieldingSabermetrics