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Pretty amazing baseball stat...

Tony gwynn could have played two more seasons.. went hitless for 2 full seasons (0-1100) and his lifetime average would still be over .300

Found that to be pretty impressive



What other amazing stats do you guys know?

Comments

  • baseballfanbaseballfan Posts: 5,473 ✭✭✭
    i heard recently that bonds has more walks then ripken and ty cobb combined.

    gwynn was the best hitter i have ever seen, hands down a true student of the science
    Fred

    collecting RAW Topps baseball cards 1952 Highs to 1972. looking for collector grade (somewhere between psa 4-7 condition). let me know what you have, I'll take it, I want to finish sets, I must have something you can use for trade.

    looking for Topps 71-72 hi's-62-53-54-55-59, I have these sets started

  • perkdogperkdog Posts: 31,783 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Tony gwynn could have played two more seasons.. went hitless for 2 full seasons (0-1100) and his lifetime average would still be over .300

    Found that to be pretty impressive



    What other amazing stats do you guys know? >>




    WOW! That is very interesting.
  • StingrayStingray Posts: 8,843 ✭✭✭
    I hope memory serves me correct.

    If Al Kaline would have hit one more homerun, he would have been the first American Leaguer to have hit 400 HRs and have 3,000 hits.
  • Alfonz24Alfonz24 Posts: 3,123 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Ray: D'you know that the human head weighs 8 pounds?
    Jerry Maguire: Did you know that Troy Aikman, in only six years, has passed for 16,303 yards?
    Ray: D'you know that bees and dogs can smell fear?
    Jerry Maguire: Did you know that the career record for hits is 4,256 by Pete Rose who is NOT in the Hall of Fame?
    Ray: D'you know that my next door neighbor has three rabbits?
    Jerry Maguire: I... I can't compete with that!
    #LetsGoSwitzerlandThe Man Who Does Not Read Has No Advantage Over the Man Who Cannot Read. The biggest obstacle to progress is a habit of “buying what we want and begging for what we need.”You get the Freedom you fight for and get the Oppression you deserve.
  • digicatdigicat Posts: 8,551 ✭✭
    If you broke Reggie Jackson's career down based on average plate apperances per year, he spent 4.77 seasons doing nothing but striking out.


    Edit to add...

    Andres Galarraga is 2nd, with 4.27 seasons worth of strike outs.
    My Giants collection want list

    WTB: 2001 Leaf Rookies & Stars Longevity: Ryan Jensen #/25
  • lostdart58lostdart58 Posts: 2,938 ✭✭✭
    Take away Hank Aaron's 755 HRs and he still has 3000 hits.

    Take away all of Pete Rose's extra base hits and he still has 3215 hits.

    Ty Cobb would have to go hitless in 2541 at bats for his batting average to go under .300
    Collector of:Baseball
    1955 Bowman Raw complete with 90% Ex-NR or better

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  • WeekendHackerWeekendHacker Posts: 1,460 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I hope memory serves me correct.

    If Al Kaline would have hit one more homerun, he would have been the first American Leaguer to have hit 400 HRs and have 3,000 hits. >>


    Carl Yastrzemski was the first, Ripken has since joined that AL only plateau, Palmeiro (steroids aside) - I can't think of any others to do it in the AL

    Obviously in the NL there is Musial, Aaron, Mays

    Career (both AL & NL stats) Winfield and Murray come to mind. If I've overlooked anyone, please correct me.
  • CDsNutsCDsNuts Posts: 10,092
    I ate 15 tacos once. That's pretty amazing.

    Lee
  • itzagoneritzagoner Posts: 8,753 ✭✭
    Joe Shlabotnik
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Joe Shlabotnik is an unseen baseball player in the world of Charles M. Schulz's long-running comic strip, Peanuts. Charlie Brown considers Joe his favorite player, and spends much of his free time trying to hunt down Joe memorabilia – baseball cards, autographs, personal meetings, etc. Charlie Brown even organized a Joe Shlabotnik Fan Club, complete with a newsletter that folded after one issue. Linus once invited Shlabotnik to a testimonial dinner for Charlie Brown; unfortunately, the ballplayer got lost en route from his day job at a car wash. Another time he was scheduled to appear at a sports banquet where fans could dine with their favorite athletes (the guest list included Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Jack Nicklaus, and Peggy Fleming), and Charlie Brown, Linus, and Snoopy bought tickets to sit at Joe's table. He was the only athlete who didn't show up, explaining later that he had marked the wrong event, city, and date on his calendar.

    Shlabotnik was demoted to the minor leagues after hitting .004 over an entire season; his one hit was a bloop single with his team comfortably ahead. One time he promised to hit a home run in the bottom of the ninth; he popped out instead, but circled the bases anyway. His greatest achievements included making spectacular plays on routine fly balls and throwing out a runner who had fallen down between first and second.

    After being sent down to Stumptown of the Green Grass League, Shlabotnik eventually retired as a player and agreed to manage the Waffletown Syrups. Sadly, Joe was fired after only one game, after calling for a squeeze play—with no one on base.

    One memorable Sunday Peanuts comic strip (which to this day a blown up copy is still on display at the Topps Company) from April 12, 1964 shows Charlie Brown buying five dollars worth of baseball cards (in 500 one-card penny packs) to get a card of Shlabotnik. Charlie Brown frantically rips open all the packs and does not get one. Lucy then buys one penny pack and much to Charlie Brown's dismay, finds Shlabotnik in her one and only pack.

    In an earlier sunday strip (8/18/63), Charlie Brown offers her every card he owns in trade for the one Joe Shlabotnik card she has, but Lucy, knowing nothing about baseball, refuses to trade and maintains, "He's kind of cute." After Charlie Brown leaves in obvious misery, Lucy throws the card into a dumpster, claiming, "He wasn't as cute as I thought."

    The name "Joseph Schlabotnik" (note spelling) had earlier been used in Peanuts in the strip of 22 February 1957, when Schroeder mentions a pianist, "the incomparable Joseph Schlabotnik", whom he later admits to having made up.

    ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

    all hail Joe Shlabotnik! image
  • mikeschmidtmikeschmidt Posts: 5,756 ✭✭✭
    The Phillies could win every game for the next 7 seasons e.g. (162-0), and still not be at .500 as a franchise.
    I am actively buying MIKE SCHMIDT gem mint baseball cards. Also looking for any 19th century cabinets of Philadephia Nationals. Please PM with additional details.
  • Speaking of Tony Gwynn's stats, and I think I read somewhere that 3 times in hit career that he hit over .400 for a 162 game period. Too bad he never hit the .400 mark for a season.
    2001-2014 Topps Heritage complete!
  • CDsNutsCDsNuts Posts: 10,092
    Gwynn also never ate 15 tacos.
  • detroitfan2detroitfan2 Posts: 3,366 ✭✭✭✭
    You can take any player in major league history, add 120 home runs to his career statistics, and Hank Aaron would still be the all-time career leader in total bases. The more I hear about Hank, the more I feel he is underrated.
  • detroitfan2detroitfan2 Posts: 3,366 ✭✭✭✭
    Also, Chuck Daly is 4 years older than Sparky Anderson. You can win a lot of bets with that fact in the Detroit area.
  • Hello...I've been reading the message boards off and on for some time now, and I have to say that nearly everytime I come here, I learn something new. When I saw this thread, I had to join - I like arcane and surprising baseball stats! Here are a couple you might find interesting:

    Mickey Mantle was hit by a pitch 13 times in his entire career! He was not hit at all until 1955, and from the 1961 season through the 1966 season, was hit only one time. (Teach your kid to switch hit!)

    Career triples:
    Stan Musial 177
    Lou Gehrig 163
    Rickey Henderson 66
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