Here is the definition Power-Speed# from Baseball Reference:
"2 x (Home Runs x Stolen Bases)/(Stolen Bases + Home Runs). The harmonic mean of HR and SB. To do well you need a lot of both. Developed by Bill James."
Here are the top 3 single seasons:
| Alex Rodriguez | 43.91 | 1998 | 
| Alfonso Soriano | 43.36 | 2006 | 
| Eric Davis | 42.53 | 1987 | 
AROD is first but his edge over the next guy is not very large. But as we will see in the first table below, Eric Davis has a large lead over the next best two year period. In fact, there are only two cases that are within 10 and none within 5.  
To find the best cases, I used Stathead to call up all the cases of players getting 50+ HRs and 50+ SBs over a two year period starting at ages 20-21 up to 32-33 (Power-Speed# is not one of their searchable stats so it has to be calculated from HRs & SBs). There were no cases before or beyond that. The 50-50 cutoff should be enough to find the best seasons.
The table below shows the highest PS#s for each age group. It also includes the second highest for ages 24-25 to see how close that was to Eric Davis.
| Age | Player | HR | SB | PS# | 
| 20-21 | Mike Trout | 57 | 82 | 67.25 | 
| 21-22 | Alex Rodriguez | 65 | 75 | 69.64 | 
| 22-23 | Alex Rodriguez | 84 | 67 | 74.54 | 
| 23-24 | Hanley Ramirez | 62 | 86 | 72.05 | 
| 24-25 | Eric Davis | 64 | 130 | 85.77 | 
| 24-25 | Willie Mays | 87 | 64 | 73.75 | 
| 25-26 | Willie Mays | 71 | 78 | 74.34 | 
| 26-27 | Rickey Henderson | 52 | 167 | 79.31 | 
| 27-28 | Barry Bonds | 80 | 68 | 73.51 | 
| 28-29 | Barry Bonds | 83 | 58 | 68.28 | 
| 29-30 | Alfonso Soriano | 82 | 71 | 76.10 | 
| 30-31 | Barry Bonds | 75 | 71 | 72.95 | 
| 31-32 | Barry Bonds | 77 | 65 | 70.49 | 
So Davis's 85.77 is 6.47 higher than the second best PS# of 79.3, belonging to Rickey Henderson. Davis accomplished this in 1986 (27 HRs & 80 SBs) and 1987 (37 HRs & 50 SBs).
Over those two years, Davis had a .286 AVG, .389 OBP and a .560 SLG. He was only caught stealing 17 times, for an 88.4% success rate.
Here is the top 10 in OBP in the NL from 1986-87 for guys with 1,000+ PAs. Davis was 6th.
| Tim Raines | 0.421 | 
| Tony Gwynn | 0.413 | 
| Keith Hernandez | 0.395 | 
| Von Hayes | 0.391 | 
| Mike Schmidt | 0.389 | 
| Eric Davis | 0.389 | 
| Ozzie Smith | 0.385 | 
| Dale Murphy | 0.382 | 
| Darryl Strawberry | 0.379 | 
| Bill Doran | 0.367 | 
Now the top 10 in SLG. Davis is first.
| Eric Davis | 0.560 | 
| Mike Schmidt | 0.547 | 
| Darryl Strawberry | 0.547 | 
| Andre Dawson | 0.528 | 
| Dale Murphy | 0.526 | 
| Will Clark | 0.521 | 
| Tim Raines | 0.500 | 
| Kevin McReynolds | 0.499 | 
| Tony Gwynn | 0.488 | 
| Andy Van Slyke | 0.484 | 
Now OPS. Davis is first.
| Eric Davis | 0.949 | 
| Mike Schmidt | 0.936 | 
| Darryl Strawberry | 0.927 | 
| Tim Raines | 0.921 | 
| Dale Murphy | 0.908 | 
| Tony Gwynn | 0.901 | 
| Will Clark | 0.880 | 
| Von Hayes | 0.868 | 
| Andre Dawson | 0.860 | 
| Kevin McReynolds | 0.837 | 
Now OPS+. Davis was 2nd
| Darryl Strawberry | 151 | 
| Eric Davis | 149 | 
| Mike Schmidt | 148 | 
| Tim Raines | 147 | 
| Tony Gwynn | 147 | 
| Dale Murphy | 139 | 
| Will Clark | 139 | 
| Von Hayes | 131 | 
| Keith Hernandez | 130 | 
| Andre Dawson | 127 | 
Here is the top 10 in SB%, minimum of 40 attempts. Davis is 2nd.
| Tim Raines | 89.55 | 
| Eric Davis | 88.44 | 
| Vince Coleman | 85.71 | 
| Bob Dernier | 82.69 | 
| Milt Thompson | 82.28 | 
| Ozzie Smith | 82.22 | 
| Tony Gwynn | 81.58 | 
| Ryne Sandberg | 80.88 | 
| Tracy Jones | 80.85 | 
| Mariano Duncan | 80.82 | 
Davis only played 132 games in 1986 and 129 in 1987, for a total of 261. The next lowest total number of games for anyone else listed in the second table is 271 for Barry Bonds for ages 28-29. But Bonds only had a 68.28 PS#, far below what Davis had.
Per 324 games, Davis would have a PS# of 106.48. Henderson would have 86.81. Soriano would have 79.28. These huge gaps show how great Davis was in 1986-87.
What if a player had 49 HRs over a two year period with a large number of SBs? It would not be enough to beat Davis. The most SBs ever over two seasons is 238 by Rickey Henderson. If a player had 49 HRs & 238 SBs, it would be a PS# of 81.27, still below Davis (in fact, Henderson hit only 19 HRs in the two years when he had 238 SBs which gives him a 35.19 PS#).
If a player had 49 HRs and 160 SBs, he gets a PS# of 75.02. Did any player ever do that? No. To get 160 SBs over two seasons, requires at least one of them with 80+ SBs. I looked at all such seasons and none of those guys reached 49 HRs over two seasons that included the 80+ SBs.
The most HRs over two seasons is 135 (by Mark McGwire). What if a player had 49 SBs and 135 HRs? His PS# would be 71.9. So again, not very close to Davis and I think any player who hit 100+ HRs over 2 seasons did not steal very many bases.
Henderson's best two year PS# with under 50 HRs was 66.96 over 1990-91 with 46 HRs & 123 SBs.
 
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