Some Matt Kemp facts to wrap up April, from ESPN Stats & Information, starting with the fact that Kemp led the majors with a weighted on-base average (wOBA) of .559:

This statistic measures the overall offensive value of a player. Each offensive “event” (single, double, etc) is weighted in proportion to its run value, or how much it contributes to a run scored, and it is based on the concept that all hits are not created equal. The MLB average wOBA this season is .326. Anything over .400 is considered great, in the top 10 percentile, and anything below .240 is considered bad, in the bottom 10 percentile.

Kemp finished April with a 1.383 OPS, almost 200 points higher than the second-highest total (David Ortiz). It’s the highest OPS for any player in a calendar month since the start of 2009.

Kemp finished April with a .417 BA, 12 HR and 25 RBI. He is just the third player since 1920 (when RBI became official) to hit .400 with 10+ HR and 25+ RBI in April.

Kemp dominated the zone, batting .456 against pitches in the strike zone.

Cliff Corcoran of SI.com and Jayson Stark of ESPN.com have their own looks at how great Kemp has been.

Elsewhere …