The shortstop (at right) has fielded the ball and thrown it to the first baseman; if the batter is put out, the shortstop will be credited with an assist.
Inbaseball, anassist (denoted byA) is a defensive statistic, baseball being one of the few sports in which thedefensive team controls the ball. An assist is credited to every defensive player who fields or touches the ball (after it has been hit by thebatter) prior to the recording of aputout, even if the contact was unintentional. For example, if a ball strikes a player's leg and bounces off him to another fielder, who tags thebaserunner, the first player is credited with an assist. A fielder can receive a maximum of one assist per out recorded. An assist is also credited if a putout would have occurred, had another fielder not committed anerror. For example, a shortstop might field a ground ball cleanly, but the first baseman might drop his throw. In this case, an error would be charged to the first baseman, and the shortstop would be credited with an assist.
If apitcher records astrikeout where the third strike is caught by the catcher, the pitcher is not credited with an assist. However, if the batter becomes a baserunner on adropped third strike and the pitcher is involved in recording a putout by fielding the ball and either tagging the runner out or throwing to first base for the out, the pitcher is credited with an assist just as any other fielder would be.
Assists are an important statistic foroutfielders, as a play often occurs when a baserunner on the opposing team attempts to advance on the basepaths when the ball is hit to the outfield (even on a caught fly ball that results in an out; seetag up). It is the outfielder's job to field the ball and make an accurate throw to another fielder who is covering the base before the runner reaches it. The fielder then attempts totag the runner out. This is especially important if the runner was trying to reachhome plate, as the assist and tag prevent the baserunner from scoring arun. Assists are much rarer for outfielders thaninfielders (with the exception of first basemen) because the play is harder to make, and also because outfielder assist situations occur less often than the traditionalground-ball assist for a shortstop, second baseman, or third baseman. However, as a result, outfield assists are worth far more than infield assists, and tell more about an outfielder's throwing arm than infielder assists do.
In recent years, somesabermetricians have begun referring to assists by outfielders asbaserunner kills. Some sabermetricians are also usingbaserunner holds as a statistic to measure outfield arms.[1] A baserunner hold occurs when the baserunner does not attempt to advance an extra base on an outfielder out of concern of being thrown out by a strong, accurate throw. This can be combined with baserunner kills for better accuracy, as runners often do not try for an extra base when an outfielder with an excellent arm is playing.
All-time single-season assists leaders by position