What Is a Good WHIP
in Baseball?
WHIP is one of the cleanest stats in baseball. One number tells you how many baserunners a pitcher allows per inning — no park adjustments, no era context needed, just how often batters are getting on base against this pitcher. Here's what the numbers mean and why the stat matters.
What is a good WHIP? — The quick answer
What does WHIP stand for?
WHIP stands for Walks and Hits per Inning Pitched. It was introduced by Daniel Okrent — better known as the inventor of fantasy baseball — and has become one of the standard stats used to evaluate pitching performance at every level of the game.
(4 + 7) ÷ 6 = 1.83 WHIP
Why WHIP matters
ERA tells you how many runs a pitcher gave up. WHIP tells you how many traffic jams they created. A pitcher can have a decent ERA but a high WHIP — meaning they're constantly loading the bases and escaping by the skin of their teeth. That's not sustainable. WHIP gives you an earlier warning signal that things are about to go sideways.
It's also why Jacob deGrom's Mets years were so fascinating to watch. His ERA was historically low but his win totals were average — because wins depend on run support, defense, and the bullpen, none of which WHIP or ERA account for. A pitcher can be dominant and still lose. WHIP shows you the pitcher's side of the story clearly.
💡 WHIP in fantasy baseball
WHIP is one of the core categories in most rotisserie fantasy baseball leagues. It's a reliable week-to-week indicator of a pitcher's form — if a pitcher's WHIP is climbing mid-season, it's often a signal to consider moving them before the ERA catches up. Low-WHIP pitchers are among the most consistently valuable fantasy assets.
What WHIP doesn't tell you
WHIP is clean but not complete. A few things it misses:
Hit batters
A pitcher who hits batters puts runners on base just like a walk — but hit batters don't count against WHIP. A pitcher with control issues who hits a lot of batters will look better in WHIP than they actually are.
All hits treated equally
A leadoff single and a grand slam homer both count as one hit in the WHIP calculation. A pitcher who gives up a lot of home runs might have a low WHIP but a high ERA — FIP captures this better.
Fielder's choice
Runners who reach base via fielder's choice don't count against WHIP. The baserunner is real but the stat ignores them.
Defensive errors
Errors create baserunners that don't show in WHIP. A pitcher working behind a bad defense looks better in WHIP than their actual situation warrants.
WHIP vs. ERA — which is better?
Neither — they answer different questions. ERA tells you how many runs scored. WHIP tells you how many runners got on. Used together they give you a much clearer picture than either one alone.
Consider two pitchers with identical 2.50 ERAs. One has a 1.20 WHIP, the other has a 1.00 WHIP. The second pitcher is clearly the stronger performer — they're keeping more runners off base and their ERA is likely to stay low because they're not relying on luck or strand rate to escape jams. The first pitcher with the 1.20 WHIP is probably benefiting from strong defense or favorable sequencing that may not continue.
⚠️ The ERA / WHIP disconnect
A pitcher with a high WHIP and a low ERA is likely pitching above their head — they're stranding a lot of runners. Expect regression. A pitcher with a low WHIP and a high ERA is probably dealing with bad luck or poor defense — expect improvement. The gap between the two stats tells you a story ERA alone can't.
All-time WHIP leaders
The all-time career WHIP leaderboard is dominated by dead ball era pitchers who worked in a fundamentally different run environment — but the modern names on the list are genuinely remarkable. Jacob deGrom at #2 all-time is one of the most underrated statistical achievements in baseball history.
| # | Pitcher | Career WHIP |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Addie Joss | 0.9678 |
| 2 | Jacob deGrom | 0.9931 |
| 3 | Ed Walsh | 0.9996 |
| 4 | Mariano Rivera | 1.0003 |
| 5 | Clayton Kershaw | 1.0017 |
| 6 | John Montgomery Ward | 1.0438 |
| 7 | Chris Sale | 1.0463 |
| 8 | Pedro Martínez | 1.0544 |
| 9 | Christy Mathewson | 1.0581 |
| 10 | Trevor Hoffman | 1.0584 |
| 11 | Walter Johnson | 1.0612 |
| 12 | Mordecai Brown | 1.0658 |
| 13 | Charlie Sweeney | 1.0673 |
| 14 | Max Scherzer | 1.0772 |
| 15 | Reb Russell | 1.0800 |
| 16 | Jim Devlin | 1.0868 |
| 17 | Smoky Joe Wood | 1.0869 |
| 18 | Jack Pfiester | 1.0887 |
| 19 | George Bradley | 1.0901 |
| 20 | Tommy Bond | 1.0908 |
| 21 | Babe Adams | 1.0920 |
| 22 | Stephen Strasburg | 1.0959 |
| 23 | Gerrit Cole | 1.0976 |
| 24 | Juan Marichal | 1.1012 |
| 25 | Satchel Paige | 1.1012 |
| 26 | Dick Hall | 1.1019 |
| 27 | Rube Waddell | 1.1019 |
| 28 | Larry Corcoran | 1.1048 |
| 29 | Deacon Phillippe | 1.1051 |
| 30 | Sandy Koufax | 1.1061 |
Frequently asked questions
WHIP is simple, honest, and useful. Under 1.00 is elite. Under 1.25 is good. Above 1.50 is a problem. It doesn't tell the whole story — hit batters, defensive errors, and the types of hits allowed all fall outside its frame — but as a quick gut check on a pitcher's effectiveness, it's one of the best single numbers in baseball.
→ What Is a Good ERA in Baseball? · What Is a Fielder's Choice in Baseball?