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Another license plate

Posted by Andy on April 10, 2011

I saw another stat-based license plate yesterday. This one was 9533 HR.

I started wondering how a number of almost 10,000 HR could be relevant. In any given season these days, there are 4,000-some homers, so that's not it.

But check this out. Among the 30 current franchises, the Yankees have the most HR, with 14,319. The Rays have the fewest, with 2,033.

The Minnesota Twins have 9,512 HR in franchise history. That means that in about 2 weeks, they'll probably get the 21 more they need to reach 9533 HR. Sweet.

27 Responses to “Another license plate”

  1. David G. Says:

    My first thought was someone who hit 33 homers in '95 but only two guys did that and neither would be bragging about 33 homers in a season. Bonds hit double that once and Edmonds topped the total a couple times in his career. It was his highest total of the 20th century though.

  2. Jim Kelly Says:

    Did anyone hit an important homer on September 5th, 1933?

  3. Eric Says:

    Took a picture of a license plate at the library today...

    WHZON1ST

    Now THAT'S a baseball license plate that needs no analysis!

  4. Andy Says:

    #2, good thought. Here's the list of players to homer that day:

    Player Date Tm Opp Rslt PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB IBB SO HBP SH SF ROE GDP SB CS WPA RE24 aLI BOP Pos. Summary
    Ben Chapman 1933-09-05 (2) NYY PHA W 9-6 5 5 2 3 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 5 RF
    Doc Cramer 1933-09-05 (2) PHA NYY L 6-9 5 5 2 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 2 CF
    Frankie Crosetti 1933-09-05 (2) NYY PHA W 9-6 5 5 1 2 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 8 SS
    Jimmie Foxx 1933-09-05 (1) PHA NYY W 6-1 4 2 2 1 0 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 4 1B
    Lou Gehrig 1933-09-05 (2) NYY PHA W 9-6 5 4 2 1 0 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 4 1B
    Fred Schulte 1933-09-05 (2) WSH BOS W 9-6 5 5 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 0.000 5 CF
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
    Generated 4/10/2011.
  5. Jim Kelly Says:

    Maybe the driver owns one of the home run balls from Jimmie Fox or Lou Gerig hit that day.

  6. Bob Kazin Says:

    I like the original idea, but with a bit more analysis. I would have tried to see the State issuing the license plate, and the year of issuance.

    If it's a team's lifetime total (or any total, for that matter), it is frozen in time. If it's an Illinois license, check my White Sox, or I guess even the (cough, hack) the cubs. Pennsylvania? Phillies or Pirates. In fact, the White Sox and Pirates are the first two teams just above 9,533. Eyeballing the Sox yearly stats, I don't see 9,533 after a full season.

    I love baseball, and I love statistics. But I've never memorized stats from future years. I'm betting the truth lies in some team's total home runs through some recenly completed season.

    Of course, if the total includes post-season, a whole different computation is involved, but that's not very likely.

    What do you think?

  7. Jon Says:

    Maybe it was the ghost of Jimmie Foxx driving the car, similar to Charlie Sheen in The Wraith, driving around getting revenge against the descendants of those pitchers who struck him out.

    Probably not. I just felt like mentioning Charlie Sheen because it doesn't seem he gets enough press.

  8. Jon Says:

    I think 9533 is also the number of home runs Bert Blyleven gave up in his career.

    Of course, it could also be a minor league team total. Or heck, maybe even a league total. Maybe the person driving was a big fan of the Texas-Louisiana League or something.

    Or maybe, and this is a long shot, I know....the plate was generated with no particular meaning from a DMV.

  9. Jon Says:

    One more thought. The HR isn't Home Run, but rather Hal Rhyne. The person driving the car is a huge Hal Rhyne fan and wanted to have Hal Rhyne's career fielding percentage to four decimals on his license plate. However, he used a different set of data than that of B-R and so his fourth decimal place is slightly off.

  10. allan Says:

    Isn't HR is used for government bills? It goes in front of the number, though.

  11. Spartan Bill Says:

    I wanted to commemorate the Mets 2 World Series championships, but the DMV wouldn't allow me to have 69AND86

  12. Neil L. Says:

    There was a space between the digits and the letters, suggesting the HR should be considered separately? In my province, the characters are always consecutive, 9533HR, which could happen by chance as opposed to a custom-ordered vanity plate.

    If so, then the Twins' team HR hypothesis seems the best, but then why the arbitrary number.....9533?

  13. Glanzer Says:

    In two weeks the Twins will hit the 21 HR needed? With the 2 HR they have in 8 games so far, it will be late June before they reach that number.

  14. Neil L. Says:

    Glanzer, ha ha, they sure have had a rough offensive start to the year.

  15. Stu Baron Says:

    @3: If only the Mets put Chin-lung Hu at 1B in at least 1 game this season - Hu's on first - for real!

  16. Soundbounder Says:

    I thought of Ted Williams:
    #9 533HR's.
    But it turns out neither he or anyone else has a career total of 533.

  17. John Autin Says:

    I enjoy this theme, but I have no suggestions for the meaning of this particular plate.

    On a tangent ... Yesterday I saw the New York plate "DSNY2UPS" -- any suggestions? I first thought of Disney, but can't find anything in that vein to fit the last half. DSNY could mean Dept. of Sanitation of New York; the agency does use that abbreviation in general, but I find no sign of it being a plate designation, and it didn't look like any sort of official car.

  18. joe baseball Says:

    Senate Vote #344 (Feb 17, 1917)
    TO AGREE TO THE AMENDMENT AS AMENDED TO H.R. 9533, WHICH AMENDMENT PROVIDES THAT AT THE FIRST ELECTION PURSUANT TO THE ACT, THE ELECTORS SHALL BE THOSE HAVING THE QUALIFICA- TIONS UNDER THE PRESENT LAWS; THEREAFTER, VOTERS TO BE U.S. CITIZENS AND 21 YEARS OF AGE, QUALIFIED TO READ AND WRITE SPANISH OR ENGLISH OR THOSE WHO AT THE 1917 ELECTION WERE LEGAL VOTERS AND EXERCISED THE RIGHT OF SUFFRAGE. (P. 3468-2,3472-1)

  19. Jimbo Says:

    I often look at the mileage on my old car and think of it as a baseball players OBP/SLG.

    For example, right now my old rustbucket has 308280 kms on it, so it's a pretty crappy hitter, .308 OBP, and .280 SLG. That OBP is pretty crappy for all cars except the really, really high mileage cars, but the SLG frequently rises high of course. When I look down at 308475 or a number like that, I'll think of a player that matches those numbers closely. Joe Carter is pretty close tot hat off the top of my head.

    Just a silly thing that runs throguh my head.

  20. Stu Baron Says:

    @18: Dubious and doubtful.

  21. Trent M Says:

    Maybe it's just someone born on 9/5/33 whose initials are H.R. There's a reason they tend to be called "vanity" plates after all...

  22. Eric Schwartz Says:

    I wonder what state issued the license plate. In Massachusetts, we have a series of license plates of the form 9999XX, so 9533HR would simply be one of those.

  23. ToddWE Says:

    I recently say this New York plate on the car of a Yankee fan:

    27NCNTNG

  24. Tom Gordon Says:

    A friend once saw this license plate (on a sports car, which may help you figure it out):

    N NYY3 S

  25. Doug Says:

    @4

    Interesting selection of players homering on Sep 5, 1933. A random date from almost 80 years ago, and 6 names pop up, and yet all are recognizable, and all but one easily so.

    When I saw that there were two different double-headers involved in these games, I guessed the date would be a Sunday. Wrong. It was a Tuesday. These two double-headers were the only AL games that day, and there was only 1 NL game played. Without air travel, scheduling was apparently quite different from today.

  26. Andy Says:

    Wow, I misread the Twins' HR. I took their AL Rank in HR (12) as their actual HR total. So, yeah, it's gonna be more than a couple of weeks.

    The various theories about which state this plate are from and how it was formatted are correct, and I'm sure this was NOT a vanity plate.

    I see license plates all the time that make me think of baseball stats...since you folks seem to like thinking about it too, I'll keep posting them when I see them.

  27. donald Says:

    If you need to have your plates registered then you might want to use a site which will be able to accomplish this for you. Not only will you be able to have the plates registered quickly, but you will also be able to browse through a range of available plates.
    -------------------
    DONALD
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