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1. The Kids Are Enright (1k5v3L)Hell, he's always sucked. Look at his PrOPS batting averages!
2004: .306 (actual .372)
2005: .307 (actual .303)
2006: .296 (actual .322)
2007: .270 (actual .351)
2008: .297 (actual .310)
2009: .291 (actual .375)
Or maybe I'm making a sarcastic point about an interesting but problematic statistic.
Might? How about when? 2016?
I'll guess that he gets there in either late 2014, or early 2015.
1. Pete Rose 3357
2. Sam Rice 2925
3. Honus Wagner 2766
4. Stan Musial 2635
5. Ty Cobb 2589
Nobody else even has 2500.
Sam Rice came up less than 100 hits short of the 3000 mark, and would almost certainly have cleared it if he hadn't lost the 1918 season to service in the war (or if baseball was playing 162 game seasons during his time).
Ichiro had 1278 hits in Japan meaning he'd need 3405 hits in the majors for the all time professional baseball record. Ichiro has a skill set that ages well, so that's not even too unreasonable.
Well I wouldn't quite go that far. And yes, all the modern stats might show he isn't as valuable as he is perceived to be. However from a baseball fan's standpoint, the chase for .400 is fun regardless of what sabermetrics say about his performance.
Except for the over-reliance on infield hits.
Neither would the guy who wrote it, as I think he was really bagging on PrOPS, not No. 1. Son.
Yes, but Ichiro has more infield hits than even the typical speedy hitter.
Yes, but Ichiro has more infield hits than even the typical speedy hitter.
Yeah, but Ichiro is better than the typical speedy hitter.
We're not talking about Willy Tavaras here.
Ahh, I see now...thanks.
Actually, speed ages well.
Ummm, is there evidence of this? Because intuitively one gets slower as one ages... And I'm going to go out on a limb here and suggest that speed is one of the keys to getting heaps of infield hits.
Ichiro had 1278 hits in Japan meaning he'd need 3405 hits in the majors for the all time professional baseball record. Ichiro has a skill set that ages well, so that's not even too unreasonable.
And Ichiro's will have all been in NPB and MLB, unlike 400+ of Rose's from the minors. If you're counting 1278 for him, you're only counting his major league Japanese hits for 1992 and 1993. I'm not going to begin to try to find minor league Japanese numbers from 20 years ago, but still.
You know what's an eye-popping stat? 262 ############# hits. Honestly, I had forgotten he set that record. My reaction to seeing the number on the page was "262 what? Oh, ####!"
If you had told me I'd see a guy in my life who hit like Boggs and Gwynn, with the exception of hitting 40 homers a year, there's not a chance I would have believed it. I didn't, and I'm not sure I even still do, think there was room for Ted Williams in today's game.
Frank Thomas did that pretty much throughout the 90s.
(And of course Boggs walked a lot more than Gwynn.)
He also has five unintentional walks so far. He's never been a big walker, but even for him this is well behind pace. But he's also striking out less, so basically, he's putting a #### ton of balls in play.
That's whyFrank Thomas is the Most Underrated Hitter of All Time.
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