How Pete Booker's OPS Compares to Similar Players
Pete Booker posted a career OPS of .669, near the league average of .644 — a profile that tracked closely with league norms. His best OPS season came in 1907, posting .833. The lowest point came in 1905 at .398. Production slipped through the final seasons. The figure moved from .728 in 1912 to .714 in 1913 and .553 in 1914. The decline marked the closing chapter of the career. Some season-to-season variance runs through the career line, but the career average tracked near league norms across 10 seasons.
Pete Booker Lifetime OPS
Stats similar to OPS for Pete Booker
| Pete Booker OPS |
|---|
| Career | 0.669 |
| Season Avg. | 0.669 |
| 162 Game Avg. | 0.669 |
| More Info | See More |
Pete Booker OPS Per Season
Pete Booker's OPS for each season of his MLB career, plotted against that year's league average. Switch between comparisons — Western League (Independent), Hall of Fame, C, North America, or players born in the same country — to see how he stacked up year by year.
Pete Booker OPS by Team
Pete Booker's career OPS totals broken down by each team he played for, ordered by when he first joined that team.
Pete Booker OPS Year-Over-Year Change
A waterfall chart tracking how Pete Booker's career OPS shifted from season to season. Each bar represents the change added to his career total that year, making peak and decline phases easy to spot.
Pete Booker OPS Distribution vs. Comparable Players
Each box summarizes Pete Booker's seasonal OPS alongside a selected comparison group across all seasons he played. The box covers the middle 50% of seasons, the center line is the median, and the whiskers extend to the min and max. A tighter box means more consistency; a higher median means more output. Use the selector to switch comparison groups.
Pete Booker OPS — Season-by-Season Breakdown
Every season of Pete Booker's MLB career with OPS alongside league, Hall of Fame, positional, birth region, and country-of-birth averages for that year. Career totals include sum, average, min, max, and median.
Note: A dash (—) means no qualifying players existed in that comparison group for that season. Most commonly this happens for the Hall of Fame group.