Philadelphia Quaker Giants Intentional Walks Charts and Records
About Intentional Walks
Intentional walks are walks issued by pitchers to avoid risking a strong hitter having a damaging at bat. Historically a pitcher would need to throw 4 intentional balls out of the strike zone, however newer rules remove this requirement and batters can be walked without pitches using a signal to the umpire. Generally, for Intentional Walks, lower is better. (Source)
Top Philadelphia Quaker Giants Players by Intentional Walks
Which Philadelphia Quaker Giants players rank highest in Intentional Walks? 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.


Philadelphia Quaker Giants Intentional Walks Per Season
Philadelphia Quaker Giants's Intentional Walks for each season of their history, plotted alongside yearly averages for MLB, the Eastern Colored League (Independent), and the Eastern Colored League (Independent).

Philadelphia Quaker Giants Intentional Walks Season Distribution vs. MLB and Peers
Each box summarizes Intentional Walks across all seasons, comparing the Philadelphia Quaker Giants to MLB as a whole, the Eastern Colored League (Independent), and the Eastern Colored League (Independent). The box covers the middle 50% of seasons, the center line is the median, and the whiskers extend to the min and max values.

Philadelphia Quaker Giants Cumulative Intentional Walks — Franchise Progression
A running total of the Philadelphia Quaker Giants's Intentional Walks through each season of their MLB history. Each point marks the cumulative franchise total at the end of that year.

Philadelphia Quaker Giants Intentional Walks — Season-by-Season Breakdown
Every season of Philadelphia Quaker Giants's history with Intentional Walks alongside yearly averages for MLB, the Eastern Colored League (Independent), and the Eastern Colored League (Independent). Career totals include sum, average, minimum, maximum, and median.
