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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Saturday, September 27, 2008
WOW! No wonder they wanted to beat the liver-snaps out of him! That’s unpossible!
Seattle Mariners outfielder Ichiro Suzuki has matched Lou Gehrig’s record with his eighth season of at least 200 hits and 100 runs.
Suzuki scored his 100th run of the season in the third inning Friday night against Oakland on Raul Ibanez’s RBI single. Suzuki, who has 209 hits, achieved the 200-hit, 100-run mark for the eighth consecutive season.
Gehrig is the only other player in baseball history to have eight seasons reaching those benchmarks. Gehrig reached the marks in 1927-28, 1930-32, 1934 and 1936-37.
Repoz
Posted: September 27, 2008 at 12:27 PM | 23 comment(s)
Related News: General, Fantasy Baseball, Seattle, Media
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Next thing you know, there will be someone breaking his record of most sacrifice hits in a season by a lefthanded-hitting first baseman wearing Number Four and weighing at least 200 pounds.
Rose had 6, plus 2 seasons of over 100 runs and a mere 198 hits, plus 3 seasons of over 200 hits and 94-97 runs.
I was wondering if any current players could challenge this hallowed record (Gehrig's career high was 21). Keep your eye on Alex Gordon!
When O when will Baseball-Reference include uniform number as searchable?! If I want the real scoop I still have to call the Elias Canetti Sports Burro.
How about having the most diseases named after you. I guess Lou "Iron Horse" Gehrig shares the record with Alöis "Always lost" Alzheimer and Burrill "Belly ache" Crohn and a few others.
Tommy John has the surgery record.
But that was from the dead skin era.
How true, but achievements like 200/100 are a lot better than the ones they come up with sometimes. For example:
Jose Lopez's RBI double in the first inning was his career-best 40th double of the season. With it, he becomes just the seventh second baseman in American League history with 40 doubles, 15 homers and 80 RBIs in the same season. (emphasis mine)
Source: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/baseball/380493_mbok25.html
I guess sacrifice flys and bunts were counted together? I don't believe Lou would have sac bunted that often.
Especially in his best year, in an all-time great lineup.
They were. In addition, from 1926-1930 hitters received credit for a sacrifice when a fly ball moved a runner up a base without scoring.
-- MWE
I am a little confused here. Why doesn't Willie Keeler's run of 8 straight years count?
From 1894 to 1901, he did the same thing in the National League. Didn't he? Am I misreading BB-REF? is the pre-1900 NL not a major league?
Mordecai Brown, Pete Gray, Carlos Lee, Jim Abbott & Antonio Alfonseca scoff in your general direction.
I wasn't expecting to see this name on the list. What happened to Lee?
And I bet Ichiro beats that, too.
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