"Like drinking coffee with a fork."

-- Willie Stargell, on hitting Sandy Koufax


(St. Petersburg, June 19, 2000) Wade Boggs has retired, and Gwynn overcomes yet another DL stint.

(Boston, November 24, 1998) Here are some selected stats which include (with the exception of Eddie Murray) the 1998 season. Quite a few players in mid-career putting up some pretty good numbers. Molitor and Murray may retire, but have hit some of the magical marks. Barry Bonds has become the first to drill 400 homers and swipe 400 bases. Gwynn, Boggs, and Ripken (sans streak) are closing on 3000 hits. And Griffey, who just turned 29, is putting up power numbers the likes of which baseball has rarely seen. Frank Thomas, despite the "off-year", still has my vote as the best hitter in baseball, but there are many great ones.


Career Numbers through 1998

Gold Dust Twins

ave g ab runs hits 2b 3b hr rbi bb k sb obp slg notes
Tony Gwynn .338 2368 9185 1378 3107 533 84 134 1121 780 423 318 .388 .458 8 batting crowns
Wade Boggs .328 2439 9180 1513 3010 578 61 118 1014 1412 745 24 .415 .443 5 batting crowns

Headed for the Hall

ave g ab runs hits 2b 3b hr rbi bb k sb obp slg notes
Paul Molitor .306 2683 10835 1780 3319 605 114 234 1307 1094 1244 504 .369 .448
Barry Bonds .290 1898 6621 1364 1917 403 63 411 1216 1357 1050 445 .411 .556 3-time MVP
Eddie Murray .287 3026 11336 1627 3255 560 35 504 1917 1333 1516 110 .359 .476
R. Henderson .283 2612 9473 2014 2678 442 60 266 978 1890 1390 1297 .404 .426
Cal Ripken .276 2704 10433 1510 2878 544 44 384 1514 1067 1174 36 .343 .447 the Streak
Mark McGwire .264 1535 5131 941 1353 219 5 457 1130 1052 1259 11 .391 .576 70 in 1998

In the Zone

ave g ab runs hits 2b 3b hr rbi bb k sb obp slg notes
Mike Piazza .333 840 3119 511 1038 148 4 200 644 330 493 11 .396 .575
Frank Thomas .321 1236 4406 894 1416 281 10 286 963 989 675 25 .443 .584 2-time MVP
Mo Vaughn .304 1046 3848 628 1165 199 10 230 752 519 954 28 .394 .542
Jeff Bagwell .304 1155 4197 778 1276 279 21 221 835 736 779 128 .411 .538
Junior Griffey .300 1375 5226 940 1569 294 27 350 1018 656 876 143 .379 .568 On the road to 755?
Albert Belle .296 1237 4684 795 1388 316 19 321 1019 530 811 71 .368 .577
Juan Gonzalez .290 1104 4269 677 1238 246 18 301 947 293 842 18 .339 .568 2-time MVP

Tres Amigos

ave g ab runs hits 2b 3b hr rbi bb k sb obp slg notes
A. Rodriguez .313 513 2070 383 648 135 11 106 352 154 386 97 .364 .543 .310, 42, 124 w/ 46 sb in '98
N. Garciaparra .309 320 1375 244 425 83 22 69 236 72 168 39 .346 .552 .323, 35, 122
Derek Jeter .308 480 1910 352 588 85 22 39 239 182 357 67 .373 .437 .324, 19, 84

(Boston, November 25, 1998) In 120 or so years of professional baseball, the shortstop has been the anchor of the infield... the finest defensive player, the "glue of the gloved ones". And through the eons, there have been many a vacuum cleaner. And a good many hitters. The question is, has there ever been this many (in one league, none the less) shortstops that can field, hit, run, and hit for power? Omar Visquel, since Hall of Famer Ozzie's retirement, is acknowledged as the #1 gloveman. And Barry Larkin as perhaps the best overall. But the future is here...

Admittedly, this is an early call. I have not seen A-Rod enough to make judgement on his defense (his offense is unquestioned, .358, 36, 123, 141 runs, 215 hits in 1996, his first full year), and the others are only 2-3 years in... but Nomar Garciaparra and Derek Jeter can do it all. Jeter made one of the most spectacular clutch plays ever in the 1998 World Series. Garciaparra drove in a record 12 runs in a 4-game Division Series. A-Rod became the third 40-40 man (alongside Barry Bonds and Jose Canseco.) Time will tell, but their careers are those for whom the bell tolls...

-- Johnny B --

1998 Batting Leaders & Commentary

1998 Season Leaders & Commentary



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