Brooklyn Tip-Tops Power Finesse Ratio Charts and Records
About Power Finesse Ratio
Power finesse ratio (PFR) is a metric that estimates the number of times per inning that a plate appearance ended, either negatively or positively for the pitcher, because of the pitcher's actions. It's calculated by summing walks and strikeouts over a given time period and then dividing by innings pitched. Generally, for Power Finesse Ratio, higher is better. (Source)
Top Brooklyn Tip-Tops Players by Power Finesse Ratio
Which Brooklyn Tip-Tops players rank highest in Power Finesse Ratio? Below are the top ten by single season and by career totals with the team, requiring at least 50 innings pitched for a season record, or 100 innings pitched for a career record with the team.


Brooklyn Tip-Tops Power Finesse Ratio Per Season
Brooklyn Tip-Tops's Power Finesse Ratio for each season of their history, plotted alongside yearly averages for MLB, the Federal League, and the Federal League.

Brooklyn Tip-Tops Power Finesse Ratio Season Distribution vs. MLB and Peers
Each box summarizes Power Finesse Ratio across all seasons, comparing the Brooklyn Tip-Tops to MLB as a whole, the Federal League, and the Federal League. The box covers the middle 50% of seasons, the center line is the median, and the whiskers extend to the min and max values.

Brooklyn Tip-Tops Power Finesse Ratio Year-Over-Year Change
A waterfall chart showing how the Brooklyn Tip-Tops's Power Finesse Ratio shifted season over season. Each bar represents the change from the previous year, making it easy to spot peak and decline phases.

Brooklyn Tip-Tops Power Finesse Ratio — Season-by-Season Breakdown
Every season of Brooklyn Tip-Tops's history with Power Finesse Ratio alongside yearly averages for MLB, the Federal League, and the Federal League. Career totals include sum, average, minimum, maximum, and median.
