Ichiro Suzuki / most 200 hit seasons
Posted by Andy on September 5, 2007
UPDATE: The 200-hit season by decade numbers were wrong and are corrected below.
Ichiro got to 200 hits again 2 nights ago, and here are some interesting numbers for you:
First considering just his career in North American MLB, he didn't get his first 200-hit season until he was 27 (his first year with the Mariners) and has proceeded to get 200 hits in each of his first 7 seasons.
First, most 200+ hit seasons from the age of 27 onwards:
From To Ages Seasons Link to Individual Seasons +-----------------+----+----+-----+-------+------------------------------+ Pete Rose 1968 1979 27-38 8 Ind. Seasons Ichiro Suzuki 2001 2007 27-33 7 Ind. Seasons Charlie Gehringer 1930 1937 27-34 6 Ind. Seasons Lou Gehrig 1930 1937 27-34 6 Ind. Seasons Bill Terry 1929 1935 30-36 6 Ind. Seasons George Sisler 1920 1929 27-36 6 Ind. Seasons Sam Rice 1920 1930 30-40 6 Ind. Seasons Wade Boggs 1985 1989 27-31 5 Ind. Seasons Paul Waner 1930 1937 27-34 5 Ind. Seasons Al Simmons 1929 1933 27-31 5 Ind. Seasons Ty Cobb 1915 1924 28-37 5 Ind. Seasons
Rose bridged the gap between the 154-game schedule and the 162-game schedule. His last 4 200-hit seasons all came in 162-game seasons (and actually the Phillies played 163 games in 1979.)
And most times achieving 200 hits within the first 7 years of a career:
From To Ages Seasons Link to Individual Seasons +-----------------+----+----+-----+-------+------------------------------+ Ichiro Suzuki 2001 2007 27-33 7 Ind. Seasons Wade Boggs 1983 1988 25-30 6 Ind. Seasons Chuck Klein 1929 1933 24-28 5 Ind. Seasons Paul Waner 1927 1932 24-29 5 Ind. Seasons Michael Young 2003 2006 26-29 4 Ind. Seasons Juan Pierre 2001 2006 23-28 4 Ind. Seasons Kirby Puckett 1986 1989 26-29 4 Ind. Seasons Pete Rose 1965 1969 24-28 4 Ind. Seasons Lloyd Waner 1927 1931 21-25 4 Ind. Seasons
Ichiro stands alone on that one. Boggs' first season in the bigs, 1982, was not a full one, otherwise he might have had 7.
By the way, if you check out Ichiro's stats in Japan, you can see that he had 200 hits over there once (1994), and hit well enough in 6 intervening seasons (1995-2000) to also have 200 hits had the seasons in Japan been long enough.
It's interesting to note that Ichiro has only a .379 career OBP in MLB, as compared to his .333 BA (just 46 points higher.) That's remarkably similar to Tony Gwynn, who in his career had a .388 OBP and a .338 BA (50 point differential.) Ichiro, like Gwynn before him, barely walks.
One more piece of data. I got to wondering whether it's more or less common these days to get 200 hits in a season than it used to be. There are so many factors to consider: a longer schedule, better pitching, more offense, smaller parks (that sometimes allow more homers, but allow outfielders to play shallower and prevent singles and doubles,) and many more.
For what it's worth, here's a decade-by-decade breakdown of 200-hit seasons.
1900s: 6 16
1910s: 8 13
1920s: 57 102
1930s: 26 95
1940s: 17 20
1950s: 12 18
1960s: 16 28
1970s: 21 41
1980s: 26 42
1990s: 16 35
2000s: 33 44*
*Keep in mind that the 2000s still have more folks from 2007 to add, plus 2008 and 2009.
Here are the players in the 2000s to do it:
Year Number Players Matching +----+------+-----------------------------------------+ 2003 6 Juan Pierre / Vernon Wells / Michael Young / Todd Helton / Ichiro Suzuki / Albert Pujols 2000 6 Todd Helton / Mike Sweeney / Johnny Damon / Darin Erstad / Jose Vidro / Derek Jeter 2006 5 Juan Pierre / Michael Young / Ichiro Suzuki / Chase Utley / Freddy Sanchez 2004 5 Juan Pierre / Ichiro Suzuki / Michael Young / Jack Wilson / Adrian Beltre 2002 4 Miguel Tejada / Vladimir Guerrero / Ichiro Suzuki / Alfonso Soriano 2001 4 Ichiro Suzuki / Juan Pierre / Rich Aurilia / Shannon Stewart 2005 2 Ichiro Suzuki / Michael Young 2007 1 Ichiro Suzuki
Year Number Players Matching +----+------+-----------------------------------------+ 2006 8 Michael Young / Miguel Tejada / Juan Pierre / Ichiro Suzuki / Chase Utley / Freddy Sanchez / Vladimir Guerrero / Derek Jeter 2004 8 Miguel Tejada / Juan Pierre / Ichiro Suzuki / Michael Young / Jack Wilson / Vladimir Guerrero / Adrian Beltre / Mark Loretta 2003 7 Juan Pierre / Vernon Wells / Michael Young / Todd Helton / Ichiro Suzuki / Garret Anderson / Albert Pujols 2001 6 Alex Rodriguez / Bret Boone / Ichiro Suzuki / Juan Pierre / Rich Aurilia / Shannon Stewart 2000 6 Todd Helton / Mike Sweeney / Johnny Damon / Darin Erstad / Jose Vidro / Derek Jeter 2002 5 Miguel Tejada / Vladimir Guerrero / Ichiro Suzuki / Alfonso Soriano / Bernie Williams 2005 3 Ichiro Suzuki / Michael Young / Derek Jeter 2007 1 Ichiro Suzuki
It's tough to draw a lot of conclusions from the list, but you'll probably enjoy perusing it as I did.
September 5th, 2007 at 10:16 am
I'm not sure how you're getting the numbers for the 2000s. For 2006 I find 8 players (your 5 plus Jeter, Tejada and Guerrero). In 2005 you missed Jeter. In 2004 you missed Tejada, Guerrero and Mark Loretta.
I didn't go back any further, but you may want to double check all your numbers.
September 5th, 2007 at 11:03 am
frankman, you're right--I did a basic batting season finder search before and got the above results, but when I replicate them now, I get your results. Most likely, I had something wrong with my previous query.
September 5th, 2007 at 11:11 am
Corrected!
I think I figured out what happened...I think I left the qualifier on there that it has to be within the 7th season of a player's MLB career.
September 5th, 2007 at 6:56 pm
Rose played his entire career in the 162-game era (began with expansion, '61 AL, '62 NL). Unless I misunderstood what you meant.
September 5th, 2007 at 8:40 pm
You're right again--I was thrown by the fact that he didn't play a full season in his first 4 200-hit years.