In
baseball, an at bat (AB) or time at bat is a
batter's turn batting against a
pitcher. An at bat is different from a
plate appearance. A batter is credited with a plate appearance no matter what happens during his turn at bat. A batter is not credited with an at bat if he:
Is awarded
first base due to interference or obstruction, usually by the
catcher.
Is replaced by another hitter before his at bat is completed, in which case the plate appearance and any related statistics go to the pinch hitter (unless he is replaced with two strikes and his replacement completes a strikeout, in which case the at bat and strikeout are still charged to the first batter).
At bats are used to calculate certain
statistics, including
batting average,
on-base percentage, and
slugging percentage. A player can only qualify for the season-ending rankings in these categories if he accumulates 502 plate appearances during the season.[1]
Pete Rose[2][3] is the all-time leader in at bats with 14,053, and the only player in
MLB history with more than 13,000 at bats. Only 30 MLB players have reached 10,000 career at bats. As of October 2023, no active players are in the top 100 of career at-bats. The active leader is
Elvis Andrus in 176th with 7,772.
Key
Rank
Rank among leaders in career at-bats. A blank field indicates a tie.