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One thousand

Posted by Andy on June 9, 2010

Most at bats in a season (1901-present), batting average of 1.000:

Rk Player AB BA Year Age Tm Lg G PA R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO OBP SLG OPS Pos
1 John Hale 4 1.000 1974 20 LAD NL 4 4 2 4 1 0 0 2 0 0 1.000 1.250 2.250 /*9
2 Jose Morales 3 1.000 2007 24 MIN AL 1 3 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 1.333 2.333 /*2
3 Manny Aybar 3 1.000 2001 29 CHC NL 17 4 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 1.000 2.000 *1
4 Sparky Lyle 3 1.000 1971 26 BOS AL 50 4 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.000 1.000 2.000 *1
5 John Paciorek 3 1.000 1963 18 HOU NL 1 5 4 3 0 0 0 3 2 0 1.000 1.000 2.000 /*9
6 Jim Brideweser 3 1.000 1953 26 NYY AL 7 4 3 3 0 1 0 3 1 0 1.000 1.667 2.667 /6
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/9/2010.

Most wins in a season (1901-present), winning percentage of 1.000:

Rk Player W W-L% Year Age Tm Lg G GS CG SHO GF SV IP H R ER BB SO ERA ERA+
1 Tom Zachary 12 1.000 1929 33 NYY AL 26 11 7 2 9 2 119.2 131 43 33 30 35 2.48 156
2 Dennis Lamp 11 1.000 1985 32 TOR AL 53 1 0 0 11 2 105.2 96 42 39 27 68 3.32 129
3 Aaron Small 10 1.000 2005 33 NYY AL 15 9 1 1 1 0 76.0 71 27 27 24 37 3.20 133
4 Howie Krist 10 1.000 1941 25 STL NL 37 8 2 0 17 2 114.0 107 57 51 35 36 4.03 94
5 Frank DiPino 9 1.000 1989 32 STL NL 67 0 0 0 8 0 88.1 73 26 24 20 44 2.45 148
6 Ken Holtzman 9 1.000 1967 21 CHC NL 12 12 3 0 0 0 92.2 76 31 26 44 62 2.53 141
7 Joe Pate 9 1.000 1926 34 PHA AL 47 2 0 0 34 6 113.0 109 38 34 51 24 2.71 155
8 Carlos Silva 8 1.000 2010 31 CHC NL 11 11 0 0 0 0 67.2 60 24 22 12 47 2.93 150
9 Rheal Cormier 8 1.000 2003 36 PHI NL 65 0 0 0 21 1 84.2 54 18 16 25 67 1.70 235
10 Arthur Rhodes 8 1.000 2001 31 SEA AL 71 0 0 0 16 3 68.0 46 14 13 12 83 1.72 243
11 Pat Mahomes 8 1.000 1999 28 NYM NL 39 0 0 0 12 0 63.2 44 26 26 37 51 3.68 121
12 Kirk Rueter 8 1.000 1993 22 MON NL 14 14 1 0 0 0 85.2 85 33 26 18 31 2.73 155
13 Grant Jackson 8 1.000 1973 30 BAL AL 45 0 0 0 33 9 80.1 54 18 17 24 47 1.90 198
14 Ted Wilks 8 1.000 1946 30 STL NL 40 4 0 0 18 1 95.0 88 41 36 38 40 3.41 102
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/9/2010.

Most posts on this blog:

Me, with 1,000!

Yup, the blog is 3 years old and this is my one thousandth post. How many have you read?

Hopefully the next 1,000 will be just as much fun.

20 Responses to “One thousand”

  1. Thomas Fraser Says:

    Doyle Alexander was 9-0 for Detroit in 1987 after coming over from Atlanta where he was 5-10.

    At the time, it may have semed like a good trade, as Alaexander helped Detroit to the AL East 1/2 pennant.

    The player Detroit gave up in exchange? Minor-leaguer John Smoltz.

    Maybe it wasn't such a good trade after all.

  2. Jim Says:

    Congrats Andy. Lord knows I wouldn't have nearly enough trivial information without these posts. Great insight on each one

  3. Bryan Mueller Says:

    Keep up the good work Andy, you are truly one of the best baseball bloggers out there. In addition to the great information, your blogs sure make the work day go by much faster (don't tell my boss).

  4. Nate Says:

    Answers:

    1) Congrats
    2) Most of them

    Thanks for giving some personality to unforgiving facts.

  5. Frank Clingenpeel Says:

    Congrats, Andy. I am fairly new to this medium, but I hope to see a LOT more of this!

  6. Spartan Bill Says:

    I salute you Andy, and I think in all 1000 posts, you only had to admonish me once.

    Tom Browning, Ralph Terry and Vincente Padilla also salute you.

  7. Paul Swaney Says:

    Congrats Andy-

    You guys do fantastic work. I hope you're enjoying it...

  8. Kelly Says:

    Congrats on your 1000th post. You do nice work! (Although you still shouldn't count incomplete seasons in "percentage in a season" records 🙂 Not buying Silva here).

  9. Gerry Says:

    Of course, that's 1000 posts since 1901. Seriously, though, well done - may we read ten thousand more.

  10. rico petrocelli Says:

    you really dish some entertainment. Accumulating lots of grey ink

  11. Andy Says:

    Kelly, you win the prize. I was waiting for someone to point out Silva.

    And Gerry, you made me laugh.

    Thanks to everyone for your kind words. The only reason I write here is to add a little bit around the edges to the massive impact that B-R.com has on baseball fandom--so it's for you folks that I do this.

  12. DoubleDiamond Says:

    Congratulations on your 1,000th post. I look forward to reading a lot more from you.

    For many years, before discovering Baseball-Reference.com, I had wondered what the highest number of wins without any losses in a season was. I owned some copies of The Sporting News' record book in the 1970s, and it always puzzled me that this particular bit of information was not included (nor was the corresponding record of most losses without any wins in a season - and it wouldn't have been Terry Felton back then). I read somewhere, maybe in the 1980s, that Tom Zachary held the record at 12-0. At first, this excited me, because I knew that Zachary was the Washington Senators pitcher who gave up Babe Ruth's 60th home run in 1927. It would have been great to have a Senators pitcher hold this record. But my heart sank as I read on and learned that Zachary had joined the Yankees by 1929, and that's where he won 12 games without a loss.

  13. Scott V. Says:

    Just wanted to say "thank you" for all the great posts. As a complete stat geek, it's one of the first blogs I look at in Google Reader every day, and I've learned countless things I would have never thought of before. It's like playing with the Franklin Baseball Encyclopedia, except with 1000x more info!

  14. rico petrocelli Says:

    Perfect Andy

    I remember Moret doing it for the Sox. The 70s. Rogerio Moret went 9-0 and it was a phemonmenon, for a kid especially.

    Though...... Aaron Small takes the prize for his season in 2007

  15. nightfly Says:

    Congrats on the 1000th post!

  16. JeffW Says:

    Andy,

    Congratulations.

    The whole Carlos Silva thing is a real head-scratcher, as the Cubs still can't find the high side of .500! How many of those perfect records came while playing for losing teams?

    John Paciorek's serves as the heartbreaker, as those were the only plate appearances (one game, three hits, two walks) of his Major League career, before his back injury prematurely ended it.

    In looking at his record, it's kind of surprising that he got the call, as he was hitting just .219 in Class-A ball at Modesto.

    Still, how's that for a variance (.209 career Minor League average, perfect in the Bigs)?

  17. Kahuna Tuna Says:

    Tom Browning, Ralph Terry and Vicente Padilla also salute you.

    I swear, Spartan Bill, this thread had only three posts at the time I looked that up. It was spooky to read those names in someone else's post!

    Andy, I also bring kind regards from Joe Gordon — 1,000 games as a Yankee, 1,000 base hits.

  18. Deacon Drake Says:

    Boy, that must have been some magic carpet ride for Howie Crist. He didn't start or close exclusively, had no real role. His ERA+ was below 100, and his K/9 and K/BB make even John Lannan cringe.

  19. Kahuna Tuna Says:

    How many of those perfect records came while playing for losing teams?

    None. There are some pretty good teams on that list, though only one World Series winner.

    1929 Yankees (Zachary): 88-66, second in AL
    1985 Blue Jays (Lamp): 99-62, lost ALCS
    2005 Yankees (Small): 95-67, lost ALDS
    1941 Cardinals (Krist): 97-56, second in NL
    1989 Cardinals (DiPino): 86-76, third in NL East
    1967 Cubs (Holtzman): 87-74, third in NL
    1926 Athletics (Pate): 83-67, third in AL
    2003 Phillies (Cormier): 86-76, third in AL East
    2001 Mariners (Rhodes): 116-46, lost ALCS
    1999 Mets (Mahomes): 97-66, lost NLCS
    1993 Expos (Rueter): 94-68, second in NL East
    1973 Orioles (Jackson): 97-65, lost ALCS
    1946 Cardinals (Wilks): 98-58, won World Series

  20. Andy Says:

    To let everybody in on the joke, Browning, Terry, and Padilla all have 1,000 career strikeouts.

    Padilla's first name, however, is Vicente, not Vincente.