Fielding Percentage Calculator · Baseball FPCT

Fielding Percentage Calculator

Compute fielding percentage from putouts, assists, and errors

Fielding Stats

FPCT = (Putouts + Assists) ÷ (Putouts + Assists + Errors). Expressed as a decimal (e.g., .982).

Fielding Percentage
⚾ Fielding Percentage: —
Total Chances (PO + A + E)
Successful Plays (PO + A)
Fielding Percentage (FPCT)
Performance Level

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Creator & Maintainer

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Faiq Ur Rahman

Founder & CEO, Toolraxy

Faiq Ur Rahman is a web designer, digital product developer, and founder of Toolraxy, a growing platform of web-based calculators and utility tools. He specializes in building structured, user-friendly tools focused on health, finance, productivity, and everyday problem-solving.

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A fielding percentage calculator helps baseball players, coaches, and statisticians measure defensive reliability. Fielding percentage (FPCT) represents the proportion of successful defensive plays , putouts plus assists out of total chances (putouts + assists + errors). This tool takes three inputs and instantly returns the FPCT as a decimal (e.g., .982) with a defensive performance rating.

Fielding percentage matters because it quantifies how often a fielder makes a play without an error. Unlike batting average which rewards hits, fielding percentage penalizes mistakes. A shortstop with 300 chances and 5 errors (.983) is more reliable than one with 300 chances and 15 errors (.950). Whether you’re tracking youth league stats, evaluating high school tryouts, scouting college prospects, or analyzing MLB Gold Glove candidates, accurate fielding percentage calculation is essential.

This calculator uses the official formula (PO + A) ÷ (PO + A + E) and handles all defensive positions equally. No downloads, no sign-ups — just reliable baseball defense math. Toolraxy provides this tool free for players, coaches, and baseball enthusiasts who need quick, accurate fielding metrics.

 

QUICK HOW-TO STEPS

  1. Enter Putouts (PO) — total putouts made by the fielder (catches, force outs, tag outs)

  2. Enter Assists (A) — throws or tags that contribute to an out (excluding putouts)

  3. Enter Errors (E) — fielding mistakes like misplays, bobbles, or bad throws

  4. Click Calculate — or the tool updates automatically as you type

  5. Read your Fielding Percentage (FPCT) — displayed as a three‑decimal figure (e.g., .975)

  6. Check the Performance Level — from “Gold Glove Caliber” to “Below Average”

  7. Use Copy to save results or Share to send FPCT data to coaches

 

HOW THE TOOL WORKS

The fielding percentage calculator applies the standard baseball defensive statistic formula.

Formula

FPCT = (Putouts + Assists) ÷ (Putouts + Assists + Errors)

Where:

  • Total Chances = Putouts + Assists + Errors

  • Successful Plays = Putouts + Assists

 

Variable meanings

VariableDescription
Putouts (PO)Fielder records an out (catch, tag, force out)
Assists (A)Fielder throws or touches ball contributing to an out
Errors (E)Fielder fails to make a routine play, advancing a runner

 

Validation rules

  • Putouts defaults to 200, accepts any non‑negative integer, treats empty as 0

  • Assists defaults to 80, accepts any non‑negative integer, treats empty as 0

  • Errors defaults to 5, accepts any non‑negative integer, treats empty as 0

  • If total chances (PO + A + E) ≤ 0, calculator shows “Enter fielding stats” and stops

 

Formatting behavior

FPCT displays as a decimal without leading zero (e.g., .982 instead of 0.982), rounded to three decimal places using .toFixed(3) with leading zero removed.

 

Performance rating thresholds 

FPCT rangeRating
≥ .990Gold Glove Caliber – Exceptional
.980 – .989Excellent – Above Average
.970 – .979Good – Reliable Defender
.950 – .969Average – Room for Improvement
< .950Below Average – Defensive Liability

 

WORKED EXAMPLE

Scenario

A high school second baseman ends the season with 187 putouts, 112 assists, and 9 errors. What’s their fielding percentage?

Step‑by‑step calculation

Step 1 – Identify inputs

  • Putouts (PO) = 187

  • Assists (A) = 112

  • Errors (E) = 9

Step 2 – Calculate total chances
Total chances = 187 + 112 + 9 = 308

Step 3 – Calculate successful plays
Successful plays = 187 + 112 = 299

Step 4 – Apply FPCT formula

FPCT = 299 ÷ 308
FPCT = 0.970779…

Step 5 – Format to three decimals without leading zero

Rounded to .971 (since 299 ÷ 308 = .97078, which rounds to .971)

Step 6 – Determine performance rating
.971 falls between .970 and .979 → “Good – Reliable Defender”

Practical takeaway

This second baseman makes a successful play 97.1% of the time. To reach “Excellent” (.980+), they would need to reduce errors to approximately 6 over the same number of chances (299 ÷ 305 = .980).

Common Mistakes When Using a Fielding Percentage Calculator

  • Forgetting assists – Only counting putouts understates total chances and inflates FPCT artificially

  • Entering total errors incorrectly – Including throwing errors that were actually hits (scorer discretion)

  • Using partial season stats – Small sample sizes produce misleading percentages

  • Comparing across positions – A .980 shortstop is exceptional; .980 first baseman is below average

  • Misinterpreting .000 as zero – FPCT of .000 means no chances recorded (often a reserve player)

 

When Should You Use a Fielding Percentage Calculator?

  • Season stat tracking – After each game to update defensive records

  • Player evaluation – Comparing fielders at the same position

  • Lineup decisions – Determining defensive substitutions late in games

  • Youth coaching – Teaching the relationship between errors and reliability

  • All‑star selection – Quantifying defensive performance for voting

H3: Real‑World Use Cases

  • Little League commissioners – Publishing end‑of‑season fielding leaders

  • Fantasy baseball managers – Evaluating defensive players for category leagues

  • Scouting reports – Standardized comparison across travel ball teams

  • Sports broadcasters – Providing context during defensive substitutions

 

BENEFITS OF USING THIS TOOL

  • Instant calculation – Updates automatically as you type any of the three inputs

  • No manual division – Eliminates arithmetic errors in (PO+A)÷(PO+A+E)

  • Built‑in performance rating – No need to memorize FPCT thresholds by position

  • Handles zero chances – Gracefully shows “Enter fielding stats” instead of division‑by‑zero error

  • Free and client‑side – No server uploads; team stats stay private

  • Proper decimal formatting – Displays .982 instead of 0.982 (standard baseball notation)

  • Copy and share – Send results to scorers or teammates instantly

  • Mobile‑friendly – Works in dugouts, press boxes, and scorekeeping tables

 

FAQ SECTION

How do I convert fielding percentage to a percentage?

Multiply the decimal by 100. FPCT of .982 = 98.2% successful plays. Baseball traditionally displays FPCT as a decimal with three places.

What’s a good fielding percentage for a shortstop?

.975 is considered excellent for a shortstop (≈ 390 successes out of 400 chances). .965 is average; .985 is Gold Glove territory given the position’s difficulty.

Why does first base have higher fielding percentages?

First basemen receive mostly putouts from throws (catching the ball at the bag). They rarely attempt difficult throws or field hard grounders, resulting in fewer error opportunities.

Can fielding percentage be over 1.000?

No. Maximum FPCT is 1.000 (perfect fielding — no errors). This tool never displays above 1.000 because errors are non‑negative.

What if I enter zero for all three stats?

The calculator shows “Enter fielding stats” because total chances = 0. A fielder with no recorded chances has no meaningful fielding percentage.

Does fielding percentage include catcher’s interference?

No. Catcher’s interference is scored as an error on the catcher but counts toward total chances. Enter it as an error value.

What’s the difference between putouts and assists?

A putout directly records the out (catching a fly ball, tagging a runner). An assist contributes to the out without recording it (throwing to first base).

Can I use this calculator for softball?

Yes. The formula (PO + A) ÷ (PO + A + E) is identical for softball. Position‑based expectations differ due to field size.

Why does my FPCT show .000 but I made plays?

.000 means total chances are zero. Check that you entered positive values for putouts or assists — if both are zero, total chances equals errors only, which is still zero if errors are also zero.

How many chances are needed for reliable FPCT?

Statisticians recommend 150–200 total chances before comparing fielders. A player with 2 errors in 20 chances (.900) might be a Gold Glove caliber over 300 chances (.980).

Does Toolraxy store my fielding data?

No. All calculations happen in your browser. No data is sent to any server — your team’s defensive stats remain private.

What is the Major League Baseball average fielding percentage?

MLB average FPCT is approximately .984 across all positions. Shortstops average .973; first basemen average .994.

Disclaimer

Toolraxy provides this fielding percentage calculator for informational purposes. Official scoring decisions may vary; always verify critical stats with league scorekeepers or official baseball statisticians.

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