NATIONAL SPECIAL EDUCATION COUNCIL
Descriptive statistics are often employed during a baseball season. Baseball statisticians spend a great deal of time and effort examining the data they get from the games and summarizing, categorizing to discover regularities to enlighten the audience. There are many examples that would make this apparent. For example in 1948 there were over 600 games played in the American League. To determine who had the best batting average in that season, you would need a lot of effort. You would need to take the official scores for each game, make a list each batter, compute the results of each time at bat, add the total number of hits, and the total number of times at bat in order to calculate with a batting average. In 1948 the American League player with the top batting average was Ted Williams. But, if your objective is to know who the top 25 players for the year were, the statistical calculations would become increasingly complicated.
The use of computer statistical programs and the capability to incorporate a lot of statistical functions on spreadsheet programs such as Excel implies that more and more complicated and detailed information can be collected, formatted and presented with only a a couple of keystrokes. All this have empowered the sport statisticians to a further degree and they are able to handle massive amounts of data and explore the data in a substantially more systematic way.