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Tampilkan postingan dengan label Ty Cobb. Tampilkan semua postingan

By Their 30th Birthday

Posted on Jumat, 27 Mei 2011 | 0 komentar
By their 30th birthday. many players had made a name for themselves. Here are some facts about some players.

By the year they turned 30 years of age here are some players statistics worth taking a look see.

Ty Cobb
He had a lifetime batting average of .370 when he hit 30 years of age. He finished with a mark of .367 when he retired.

Wade Boggs
Wade had a lifetime batting average of .356 when he turned 30 years of age. When he was done playing his lifetime average was .328

Joe Jackson
He had a .356 average and completed his career with a .358 average.

Ken Griffey Jr.
The Kid as he has been called had 438 home runs when he completed his season in his 30th year. That was year 2000. An average of 36.5 home runs per year in his first 12 seasons. He now has 536 home runs. He has averaged 18.6 home runs per year from 2001 to 2005. A shame what injuries can do. I think he had a chance to hit more home runs than Hank Aaron if he was injury free. Averaging 37 home runs a year from 2001 to 2009 would have put Ken at 771 home runs lifetime.

Lou Gehrig
By his 30th birthday he had 1285 Runs Batted In. That year was up to and including 1933. From 1934 to 1938 he had 709 RBIs. And in 1939 in eight games he had one more RBI. His falloff was not too severe after he turned 30. He averaged 141 RBIs in his last five full years of his career.

Mickey Mantle
He had 1251 walks when he ended the 1962 season. That was the year The Mick hit 30 years of age. He is number one on the list of most walks by your 30th birthday. He finished with 1733 bases on balls after playing his final year of his career in 1968.

Lou Brock
Lou Completed his career with 938 stolen bases. 604 of those stolen bases took place during and after the year he turned 30 years of age. In 1974 when he turned 35 he stole 118 bases. He was also thrown out 33 times in 1974. That's a lot of running.

Otis Nixon
Stole 515 of his 620 bases from the time he turned 30 to when he retired. The latter part of his career proved to be his most productive time. 83% of his stolen bases were swiped after he turned 30. When most players start to slow down, I guess he was revving up.

Feel free to pass this article on to anyone you think would enjoy these stats.

Unusual Baseball Statistics - I Love ‘em

Posted on Senin, 08 November 2010 | 0 komentar
I have been fascinated by some of the statistics that have been amassed by some of the major leaguers. Viewing some players numbers has amazed me. My Baseball memorabilia are these amazing stats.

Here are a few achievements I thought might interest you.

Rogers Hornsby - From 1921 to 1925 he batted 2679 times and He hit safely 1078 times. An average of .402 during this five year run. Not too shabby.
From ages 36 to 41 - his final six years in the Majors Rogers batted 350 times in total. He hit safely 105 times and fell 70 hits short of 3000 hits for his career. Maybe he could have planned better

Lou Gehrig - From 1930 to 1934 he drove in 813 runs. An average of 162 RBIs per year - Enough said The man was a run producing machine

Ty Cobb - He had 1937 RBIs in his career and never hit more than 12 home runs in a single year. Seven times he knocked in over 100 runs.

Runs Batted In - This following stats are based on a per game basis. Here are a few of the highest numbers. No one player averaged one rbi per game for his career. Lou Gehrig .921 - Hank Greenburg .915 - Joe Dimaggio .885
Jimmie Foxx .859. Hey where’s The Babe?

These RBIs statistics are based on a per at bat basis. Here are some of the highest numbers. Babe Ruth .263 - Lou Gehrig .249 - Hank Greenburg .249

I hope you enjoyed these unusual stats.

Feel free to pass this on to anyone you think would enjoy the read.

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