👉 TAP TO SAVE 50% WITH CODE SPRING
X
Lost password?

Don't have an account?
Gain Access Now

X

Receive free daily analysis

NFL
NBA
NHL
NASCAR
CFB
MLB
MMA
PGA
ESPORTS
BETTING

Already have an account? Log In

X

Forgot Password


POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

#1 Expert Projections
Save 50% Now
Import Your Leagues
Props Tool
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
24x7 News and Alerts

The Bigger Picture - The Miseducation of Park Factors

Pierre Camus examines park factors early in the 2021 MLB season and the fantasy baseball impact.

Another no-hitter in the books. Something's in the water or, more accurately, in the baseballs. We already covered that topic last time so let's figure out how to extract more offense from our daily or weekly lineups.

Home/road splits seem like a good place to start and we know certain stadiums play friendlier to offense than others. A batter in Coors Field is a sure bet. Dodger Stadium is a notorious pitcher's park, so prioritizing pitching over hitting seems logical, especially in DFS where we're looking for HR potential. But what if I told you that L.A. has ranked above league-average in Park Factor for home runs five years in a row? Or that two stadiums that ranked among the highest in HR Park Factor in 2019, our last full season, are both bottom-10 this year?

You could say some parks just "hit different" these days. But that's not it at all. Taking a cursory glance at Park Factors can lead to serious miseducation if we don't recognize the underlying causes for yearly variance. Let's break it down and figure out what factors go into park factors and which we can trust.

Featured Promo: Save 50% the regular price with discount code SPRING, for a limited time. Exclusive access to our Team Sync platform, DFS cheat sheets, Lineup Optimizers, betting/prop picks, and exclusive content from Nick Mariano and Eric Cross! GAIN ACCESS NOW

 

Ex-Factor

For those unfamiliar, here is the definition taken from MLB.com:

Ballpark factor, at its most basic, takes the runs scored by Team X (and its competitors) in Team X's home ballpark and divides the figure by the runs scored by Team X and its competitors in Team X's road contests.

A bit further down, "It isn't affected by the teams or players involved, because those teams and players are also playing games in other stadiums."

OK, so apples to apples, right? That means parks should be fairly steady in terms of performance from year to year, assuming nothing has changed structurally like fences being moved in, retractable roofs being built, etc.

In that case, let's see if it holds true over the past five full seasons (we'll throw in 2020 just for kicks this time).

To simplify things, I'll exclude Toronto, Buffalo, Dunedin, and any temporary parks that shouldn't be factored into lineup decisions. It's pretty basic anyway; if a hot offense is playing at a minor-league park, stream those hitters and avoid those pitchers.

Here are the HR Park Factor for the top-five and bottom-five stadiums early in 2021 followed by the previous five years of data. These stats come from ESPN. For reference, a rate higher than 1.00 means the park favors the hitter and below 1.00 favors the pitcher.

Team 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016
Cincinnati 1.86 2.14 1.13 1.39 1.09 1.17
Baltimore 1.62 1.00 1.26 1.12 1.23 1.00
Colorado 1.28 1.14 1.26 1.28 1.19 1.26
Houston 1.24 0.71 1.19 1.04 1.09 0.82
Cleveland 1.16 0.89 1.04 1.01 0.97 1.16
San Fran 0.72 1.08 0.69 0.75 0.61 0.70
Detroit 0.70 0.79 1.08 0.86 1.15 1.13
Boston 0.68 1.00 0.87 0.96 0.82 1.06
Milwaukee 0.55 1.15 1.03 1.11 1.04 1.12
New York (NL) 0.49 1.25 1.00 0.88 0.79 1.09

Obvious takeaways:

  • Coors Field is a hitter's park (duh).
  • Cincy and Baltimore must be hitter's parks considering how bad those offenses have been the past couple of years.
  • Green Monster no likey da long ball
  • San Fran winds keep doing their thing to suppress power and always will.


The rest of the home parks on this list, however, are confusing. Some rank high in HR factor one year then go way down the next year. We hear about Comerica in Detroit being among the worst places to go deep yet it was way above league average in 2016-2017 and has spent half the past six seasons over 1.00 which makes it look like a hitter's park for power!

How do some ballparks shift from one end of the spectrum to the opposite? Once a launching pad, always a launching pad, right?

 

Lost Ones

The biggest mover is Miller Park in Milwaukee. Five years ago, it ranked only behind Coors Field in terms of Park Factor for runs and homers, producing a 1.29 HR Factor. In 2021, it is second lowest with a 0.55 HR Factor. How could one park change so drastically? Does a lack of capacity crowd make that kind of difference? Of course not. It's the lineup, dummy.

The Brewers have spent most of this season without Christian Yelich, who has zero homers on the year. Young slugger Keston Hiura hit one homer along with his .152 average before getting demoted. Ryan Braun isn't around anymore. Let's just admit that the Brew Crew has one of the weakest offenses in the NL. It wouldn't matter if they were playing in Beloit Stadium, they'd still be one of the lesser slugging teams around.

Petco Park in San Diego was long cast as an extreme pitcher-friendly park. In 2016, it had the third-lowest Park Factor. It should be noted that back in 2013, the dimensions were altered to make it play more neutral by moving the fence in left-center and right-center field in 12 feet. Didn't matter - it was still suppressing power. Over the past two seasons, however, it ranks 13th and 16th in HR Factor. What made the bigger difference: climate change or Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr.?

Then take the "Big A" in Anaheim. Five short years ago, back in the Albert Pujols era, the Angels' home park was fourth-lowest in HR factor despite a prime-age Mike Trout in front of Phat Albert. The problem is that nobody else on that squad other than Kole Calhoun and C.J. Cron had any sort of legit power tool. Those four aside, the only other player who reached double-digit home runs that season was Jefry Marte. Next in line was Jett Bandy with eight dingers. Not quite Murderer's Row.

How do you explain Cleveland, which ranks top-five in HR factor for the second time in six years but also has two seasons well below league average? Two big boppers in Jose Ramirez and Franmil Reyes who are among the MLB home run leaders and a pitching staff that has surprisingly yielded 53 taters, ninth-most in the majors.

Home parks are a factor in terms of offensive production in some cases but not always. Aside from the regular outliers, which I'll list below, the best indicator of whether a park will be favorable to home runs in a given season is still the caliber of hitters who take residence in the batter's box.

 

Nothing Even Matters?

I'm not saying Ballpark factors don't matter at all because it's clear that certain parks will always play favorably one way or the other. It's just not as cut-and-dry as we make it seem.

There's also the matter of handedness for park factors. Some play much better to right-handed hitters than left-handed hitters and vice versa. This is a rabbit hole I don't intend to fall down right now but deeper digging should be done if you plan to in fact utilize park factors in your decision-making process, just as you would with L-R splits and Batter vs Pitcher matchups. By the way, here's a free DFS tip: career numbers for an individual hitter vs. individual pitcher usually mean jack squat.

Those who use park factors as part of their arsenal when making informed choices either on draft day or when building DFS lineups stand validated in one sense: there are certain stadiums that consistently favor power production and those that deter it. Once you escape those few, we shouldn't be so quick to label all others as necessarily belonging in one category or another.

Without further ado, I present the triumphant trio of hitters' parks and pitchers' parks based on my extensive research of looking up park factors online for a few minutes and glancing at the data.

Most Hitter-Friendly Parks: Great American Ballpark (Cincinnati), Coors Field (Colorado), Oriole Park (Baltimore)

Most Pitcher-Friendly Parks: Oracle Park (San Francisco), Tropicana Field (Tampa Bay), Fenway Park (Boston)

Those That Might Fluctuate Year-to-Year: everything else



Download Our Free News & Alerts Mobile App

Like what you see? Download our updated fantasy baseball app for iPhone and Android with 24x7 player news, injury alerts, sleepers, prospects & more. All free!



More Fantasy Baseball Advice




POPULAR FANTASY TOOLS

#1 Expert Projections
Save 50% Now
Import Your Leagues
Props Tool
Compare Any Players
Compare Any Players
24x7 News and Alerts

REAL-TIME FANTASY NEWS

Gradey Dick

Open to Trade Away From Toronto
Michael Porter Jr.

Wants to Stay in Brooklyn
NBA

Hornets Extend Charles Lee After 25-Win Improvement
Jarred Vanderbilt

Ruled Out for Game 2 Against Thunder
Luke Kennard

Cleared to Play Thursday
Ayo Dosunmu

Considered Questionable for Game 3 Against Spurs
Anthony Edwards

Remains Questionable on Injury Report Ahead of Game 3
Mitchell Robinson

Probable for Friday's Action
Kevin Huerter

Remains Out Thursday
Sam Merrill

Unavailable Thursday
OG Anunoby

Tagged as Questionable for Friday
Joel Embiid

Listed as Questionable for Game 3 Against Knicks
Dan Vladar

Looks to Return to Winning Ways Thursday
Connor Dewar

Penguins Re-Sign Connor Dewar for Two Years
Mikko Rantanen

Played Through Torn MCL Late in the Season
Rasmus Dahlin

Ready to Go Friday
Kyle Pitts Sr.

Signs Franchise Tender on Thursday
Alexander Nikishin

Set to Return Thursday
Joe Burrow

Attending Voluntary Workouts, Ready for Monster Season?
Christian Dvorak

Available Thursday
Owen Tippett

Remains Out Thursday
Roman Anthony

Heading for the Injured List
CFB

Sam Leavitt Expected to Be Full-Go for Fall Camp
T.J. Hockenson

Can T.J. Hockenson Bounce Back with Improved Quarterback Play in Minnesota?
Jordan Love

Is Jordan Love's Dynasty Upside Fading Entering 2026?
Dalton Schultz

Facing Increased Playing Time Competition in Houston Entering 2026
Kimani Vidal

Dynasty Value in Question Due to Uncertain Playing Time Outlook
Juwan Johnson

Facing Reduced Role in New Orleans Following NFL Draft?
Chuba Hubbard

a Prime Bounce-Back Candidate Following Offseason Moves
Indianapolis Colts

Kenny Moore Granted his Release by Colts
Minnesota Vikings

Chad Alexander a Candidate for Vikings GM Job
Tarik Skubal

Could Return in 4-6 Weeks After Successful Elbow Surgery
Minnesota Vikings

Vikings Request to Interview RJ Gillen for GM Job
Drake Maye

Shoulder Doing "Great"
Gunnar Helm

a Clear Breakout Candidate Despite Crowded Offense?
Travis Hunter

Dynasty Managers Regret Drafting Travis Hunter?
Khalil Shakir

Offseason Addition a Threat to Khalil Shakir's Consistency?
Christian Watson

Can Christian Watson Overcome Injury History?
Pat Freiermuth

a Bounce-Back Candidate in New System
Tua Tagovailoa

Lacks Long-Term Appeal in Dynasty Leagues
Cole Ragans

Royals Hopeful That Cole Ragans Makes his Next Start
Jordan Mason

Still Holding Dynasty Value
Aaron Rodgers

Planning a Visit With Steelers
Dontayvion Wicks

What is Dontayvion Wicks' Dynasty Ceiling?
Paul George

Does a Little Bit of Everything in Game 2 Loss
Tyrese Maxey

Tallies Team-High 26 Points in Wednesday's Loss
Jalen Brunson

Leads Knicks With 26 Points Wednesday
Victor Wembanyama

Notches Another Double-Double
Stephon Castle

Scores Game-High 21 Points in Blowout Win
Ayo Dosunmu

Exits Game 2 With Heel Issue
OG Anunoby

Suffers Apparent Leg Injury Wednesday
Mark Stone

Nets Late Power-Play Goal in Losing Effort
Leo Carlsson

Pots Game-Winner Wednesday Night
Juraj Slafkovsky

Ends Point Drought in Game 1 Loss
Bowen Byram

Ties Franchise Record With Fourth Postseason Goal
Zach Benson

Posts Second Consecutive Multi-Point Game
Rasmus Dahlin

"Seems Fine" After Early Exit on Wednesday
Sam Merrill

Listed as Questionable for Thursday
Luke Kennard

Tagged as Questionable for Game 2 Against Thunder
Emilio Pagán

Emilio Pagan has Grade 2 Hamstring Strain, Expected to Miss 4-8 Weeks
Joe Ryan

Listed as Scheduled Starter for Saturday Against Cleveland
Tyler Glasnow

Not Expected to Land on the Injured List
Framber Valdez

Suspension Reduced to Five Games
Nils Hoglander

Will Miss World Championship Due to Injury
Christian Dvorak

Likely to Play in Game 3 Against Hurricanes
Owen Tippett

a Game-Time Decision Thursday
Noah Cates

to Miss Rest of Round 2
Arber Xhekaj

Rejoins Canadiens Lineup Wednesday
Brendan Gallagher

Scratched on Wednesday
Logan Stanley

Returns to Action Wednesday
Framber Valdez

Suspended Six Games
Tyler Glasnow

Exits Early on Wednesday With Back Pain
CFB

Brauntae Johnson the Next Star in Notre Dame's Secondary?
CFB

Ethan Barbour a Name to Know in Georgia's Tight End Room
CFB

Payton Pierce Next Up at Linebacker for Ohio State
CFB

Javin Gordon to Play Significant Role for Tennessee?
CFB

Tanook Hines Stepping into WR1 Role for USC
CFB

Rueben Owens II has "Star Potential" in Fourth Campaign
Brandon Woodruff

has Fluid Drained From his Right Shoulder
Brandon Woodruff

to Resume Throwing on Saturday, Return Imminent?
Carlos Correa

to Have Season-Ending Ankle Surgery
Jacob Misiorowski

Listed as Friday's Probable Starter
Logan Webb

Dealing With Knee Discomfort
Carlos Correa

Expected to Miss Significant Time With Ankle Injury
Collin Morikawa

Withdraws From Truist Championship
Xander Schauffele

Carries Elite Form Into Quail Hollow
Hideki Matsuyama

Looks to Bounce Back at Truist Championship
Matt Fitzpatrick

Secures Third Win of 2026 Season
Patrick Cantlay

Continues Playing Well Heading to Truist Championship
Ludvig Aberg

Returns to Action For Truist Championship
Justin Thomas

Searching for Consistency at Quail Hollow
Jordan Spieth

Looks to Break Through at Quail Hollow
Adam Scott

Brings Strong Form to Quail Hollow
Robert MacIntyre

a Steady Option at Truist Championship
Jason Day

Looks to Overcome Approach Struggles at Quail Hollow
Akshay Bhatia

Looks for Complete Game at Truist Championship
Mats Zuccarello

Extends Point Streak to Five Games
Emilio Pagán

Emilio Pagan Headed for Injured List With Hamstring Injury
Emilio Pagán

Emilio Pagan Carted Off With Apparent Hamstring Injury on Tuesday
Justin Rose

to Continue Mid-Season Club Change at Truist Championship
Si Woo Kim

is Back to Peak Form Ahead of Truist Championship
Sam Burns

to Bounce Back at Truist Championship
Cameron Young

Looks to Carry Dominance to Quail Hollow
Rory McIlroy

Returns to Familiar Stomping Grounds This Week at Quail Hollow
Chris Gotterup

Looking to Bounce Back at Quail Hollow
MLB

Cardinals-Brewers Game Postponed on Tuesday
Roman Anthony

Day-to-Day With Wrist Sprain
Jacob Misiorowski

"All Things Look Good" for Jacob Misiorowski to Start on Wednesday
Tommy Fleetwood

Looking For Better Iron Play at Quail Hollow
MLB

Rockies-Mets Game Postponed Due to Inclement Weather
CFB

Mario Craver Enters No. 1 Wide Receiver Role for Marcel Reed
CFB

LaNorris Sellers a Strong Rebound Candidate in 2026
CFB

Cam Coleman Poised for Monster Year at Texas?
CFB

Will Hammond Pushing to Be Ready for Week 1
Alex Fitzpatrick

Looking to Keep Up Ball-Striking Output at Quail Hollow
CFB

Notre Dame Leads College Football in Returning Snaps
CFB

Two Ole Miss Football Players Arrested, Charged with DUI
Ben Griffin

Looks Solid on the Surface Heading to Charlotte
Chase Elliott

Earns his Second Texas Motor Speedway Victory
Denny Hamlin

Misses Out on Winning at Texas
Alex Bowman

Finishes Third for the Second Week in a Row at Texas
Tyler Reddick

Earns Seventh Top-Five Finish of the Season at Texas
Chris Buescher

Scores his First Career Texas Finish in the Top Five
CFB

Bryce Underwood in Better Situation Entering Sophomore Season
CFB

Nico Iamaleava Emerging as Leader, Playmaker for UCLA
Jack Della Maddalena

Gets Dominated At UFC Perth
Carlos Prates

Shines At UFC Perth
Beneil Dariush

Suffers A First-Round TKO Loss
Quillan Salkilld

Remains Unbeaten In The UFC
Tim Elliott

Drops Decision At UFC Perth
Steve Erceg

Wins Back-To-Back Fights
Ollie Schmid

Suffers First-Round TKO Loss
Marwan Rahiki

Remains Unbeaten
Christopher Bell

Is Christopher Bell Worth Rostering for Texas Lineups?
William Byron

Might have the Speed to Compete for the Win at Texas
Joey Logano

Provides Solid Upside for Texas DFS Lineups
Chase Briscoe

Could Chase Briscoe be A Sneaky Pick for Texas Lineups?
Ty Gibbs

Should DFS Managers Roster Ty Gibbs at Texas?
Daniel Suarez

Is Daniel Suarez Worth Rostering After Career-Best Starting Position at Texas?
Kyle Busch

Is a DFS Risk Starting in the Top 10 at Texas
Tyler Reddick

One of the Favorites to Win at Texas
Chase Elliott

Could Contend for Another Win at Texas
Carson Hocevar

on Pole at Texas
NASCAR

Bubba Wallace Wrecks in Practice at Texas
Chris Buescher

Looking to Continue Strong Run at Texas
Austin Dillon

Blows Engine in Practice at Texas
RANKINGS
C
1B
2B
3B
SS
OF
SP
RP

RANKINGS

QB
RB
WR
TE
K
DEF