Your Relationship Batting Average: Why .333 Might Be Hall of Fame Material

Your Relationship Batting Average: Why .333 Might Be Hall of Fame Material
BY Paul Janke

Your Relationship Batting Average: Why .333 Might Be Hall of Fame Material

Estimated Reading Time: 4 minutes

This unrealistic standard might explain why divorce rates have climbed since 1990

What is your relationship batting average?  In professional baseball, a player who gets a hit three times out of every ten at-bats is considered elite.

A .333 batting average in baseball can earn you millions of dollars, widespread fame, and a potential spot in the Hall of Fame. Yet in relationships, we often expect ourselves and our partners to bat 1000%—perfection every single time.

This unrealistic standard might explain why divorce rates have climbed since 1990, with roughly 50% of marriages ending in failure, and this rate is doubling every few years. Perhaps we’re measuring relationship success with the wrong scorecard.

The Reality of Relationship At-Bats

Every day in a committed relationship presents multiple “at-bats.” How you respond when your partner is stressed, whether you handle disagreements about money gracefully, how you recover from saying the wrong thing—these are all moments where you can either get a hit or strike out.

The question isn’t whether you’ll make mistakes (you will), but how consistently you can recover when conflicts arise.

Can you apologize sincerely?
Do you work to understand your partner’s perspective?
When you mess up, do you make genuine efforts to repair the damage?

If you can successfully restore connection and resolve issues three out of every ten times there’s friction, you might be performing at an All-Star level.

The Mathematics of Realistic Expectations

Consider this: if professional athletes—who dedicate their entire careers to perfecting one specific skill—can only succeed one-third of the time, what does that tell us about expecting perfection in the infinitely more complex arena of human relationships?

A .333 “batting average” in marriage might look like successfully navigating disagreements, offering genuine apologies, and changed behavior.

The couples who last aren’t the ones who never argue—they’re the ones who’ve learned to repair effectively when they do.

Learning from Real Experience – Showing up even when you don’t like your partner

During my 23-year marriage, we faced profound challenges: pregnancy losses, temporary separation, unfounded accusations, and ultimately, cancer that ended my wife’s life.

These were major league curveballs that tested every aspect of our commitment – they were not minor disagreements about household chores.

We overcame the challenges we could because we understood that marriage was a commitment to love each other, even when we didn’t particularly like one another.

The secret wasn’t perfection—it was persistence and the willingness to keep stepping up to the plate.

Setting Realistic Relationship Standards

Grace Buffer’s worked for us.

In my research for my book – Silver Time Dating: A Godly Pathway to Love After 50 – You’re Not Alone, the most successful couples establish what I call a “grace buffer,” an understanding that neither partner will handle every situation perfectly.

This doesn’t mean lowering standards or accepting harmful behavior. It means recognizing that growth, forgiveness, and repair are ongoing processes, not one-time achievements.

Think about your own relationship patterns:

  • Do you and your partner have realistic expectations about conflict resolution?
  • Have you discussed what successful “recovery” looks like after disagreements?
  • Does one of you expect perfection while the other struggles with human limitations?

The Hall of Fame Question

In baseball, a .333 average over a career gets you seriously considered for the Hall of Fame.

In relationships, consistently working to repair, reconnect, and restore harmony when you face challenges might be the difference between a marriage that thrives and one that becomes another divorce statistic.

Your relationship batting average isn’t about avoiding conflict—it’s about handling it with the skill and commitment that champions display.

Successful couples show up consistently, learn from their strikeouts, and never give up on getting better. Because in both baseball and love, it’s not about batting 100% of the time. It’s about being reliable when it matters most.

What’s your relationship batting average?
Are you even playing for the same team?  

Finally, do you agree that a successful long-term relationship begins with the first “Hello” while dating?   

Is Dating Like Baseball?

Just like baseball players need years of preparation before the major leagues, lasting relationships need intentional groundwork from the start. In my book, Silver Time Dating: A Godly Pathway to Love After 50, I outline the MAGIC formula that helps you build a championship-level relationship from day one:

·         “M” – Meaningful Preparation – knowing your own batting strengths before you step up to the plate.

·         “A” – Authentic Connection – being genuine rather than trying to impress.

·         “G” – God-Guided Discernment – choosing teammates who share your values.

·          “I” – Intentionality – consistently showing up for your partner.

·         “C” – Commitment to Clarity – communicating openly about expectations and goals.

Whether you’re building a Hall of Fame baseball career or a lasting marriage, success comes from a commitment to improve your average, every single day, and making ongoing improvement over time.

About the Author

Paul Janke is the founder of Silver Time Dating and the author of Silver Time Dating: A Godly Pathway to Love After 50. Drawing from his own journey as a widower, father, and seasoned coach, Paul helps Christian singles over 50 prepare for their “last, first date.” Through the SAFE and MAGIC frameworks, he equips believers to date with wisdom, purpose, and faith — learning how to step up to the plate with clarity and confidence in relationships.

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“Dating after 50 isn’t about starting over—it’s about starting wiser. M.A.G.I.C. and S.A.F.E. are the tools I wish I had years ago.”

– Paul Janke – Founder, Silver Time Dating

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Welcome to our growing collection of resources designed to support your path to meaningful connection. These Christ-centered tools complement the Dating MAGIC framework and provide practical guidance for specific aspects of your relationship journey.

M — Meaningful Preparation (North)

Chapters 1 through 4 focus on Meaningful Preparation 

In this critical first step, you’ll:

  • Heal past relationship wounds through prayer and biblical reflection
  • Understand your attachment style from a scriptural perspective
  • Clarify your values and non-negotiables based on God’s Word
  • Establish healthy boundaries that honor yourself and others
  • Reconnect with your purpose in this season of life

“Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland.” — Isaiah 43:18-19

I - Intentional Relationship Building (West)

Chapters 10 through 12 focus on Intentional Relationship Building

Build connections with godly care and healthy boundaries

This phase shows you how to:

  • Foster spiritual intimacy before physical intimacy
  • Navigate family dynamics with grace and wisdom
  • Create purposeful dating experiences that deepen connection
  • Communicate expectations clearly and lovingly
  • Address potential challenges with faith and maturity

“Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it.” — Proverbs 4:23

A - Authentic Connection (East)

Chapters 5 and 6 focus on Authentic Connection

Present yourself honestly in alignment with your faith

This step guides you to:

  • Create a dating profile that truthfully reflects your spiritual journey
  • Communicate your faith story effectively in early conversations
  • Share your values and history with appropriate vulnerability
  • Recognize and avoid the temptation to present an idealized version of yourself
  • Build connections based on shared spiritual values rather than superficial attraction

“Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbor, for we are all members of one body.” — Ephesians 4:25

G - God-Guided Discernment (South)

Chapters 7 through 9 focus on God-Guided Discernment

Let spiritual wisdom guide your relationship decisions

Here you’ll learn to:

  • Recognize divine nudges and red flags in potential relationships
  • Apply biblical wisdom to relationship progression
  • Create space for prayer and reflection throughout your dating journey
  • Seek godly counsel from mature believers
  • Trust the Holy Spirit’s guidance in decision-making

“But solid food is for the mature, who by constant use have trained themselves to distinguish good from evil.” — Hebrews 5:14