Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message) This is a list of single-season records in Major League Baseball. Batting records Overview (1876–present) Records Player # Season Refs Games Maury ...
In the past 81 years, only Ichiro Suzuki, whose first season in Major League Baseball was his tenth in the top professional ranks, following nine years in his native Japan, has topped 250 hits in a season (with 262 hits in 2004). [50] Ichiro ended his playing career with 3,089 MLB hits [49] and 1,278 hits in the Japanese major leagues [51 ...
Lyons hit in 52 consecutive games that season, but his streak included two games (#22 and #44) in which his only "hits" were walks. In 1968, MLB ruled that walks in 1887 would not be counted as hits, so Lyons' streak was no longer recognized, though it still appears on some lists. In 2000, Major League Baseball reversed its 1968 decision ...
October 1 – Ichiro Suzuki surpasses George Sisler's 84-year-old record of 257 hits in a single season. After this game, Ichiro collects 259 hits in the season with two games left; he finishes the season with 262 hits. October 2 The Anaheim Angels clinch their first AL West Division title in 18 years with a 5-4 victory over the Oakland Athletics.
Years before he would make his entrance into Major League Baseball, Japanese outfielder Ichiro ... Suzuki held many stats after his first 10 years in the MLB, including 200 hits each season of ...
The display of Ichiro Suzuki, located on the third floor of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, which shows the Ichi-meter, record for hits in a season for Ichiro Suzuki in 2004. Suzuki had his best offensive season in 2004, highlighted by his breaking of George Sisler 's 84-year-old record for most hits (257) in a season.
MLB icon. Ichiro’s professional debut came with the Orix Blue Wave of Japan’s Pacific League on July 11, 1992. ... becoming just the second player ever to win both honors in the same season ...
Ichiro Suzuki is 50 years old and has been retired from MLB since 2019, but he can still hit home runs that break windows. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) (Steph Chambers via Getty Images)