Frank Thomas – đēđ¸
Credit: clare and ben
- Full name — Frank Edward Thomas Jr. Â
- Nickname â “The Big Hurt”
- Nationality â American đēđ¸
- Career accomplishments –
- 5àAll-Star (1993â1997)
- 2ÃÂ AL MVPÂ (1993, 1994)
- 4àSilver Slugger Award (1991, 1993, 1994, 2000)
- AL batting champion (1997)
- Chicago White Sox No. 35Â retired
- National Baseball Hall of Fame member (2014)
- Five-time All-Star (1993â1997)
- Four-time Silver Slugger Award winner (1991, 1993â1994, 2000)
- On June 28, 2007, Thomas became the 21st player in major league history to hit at least 500 home runs, after he hit a first-inning home run at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome.
- Thomas is on a short list of players who have hit 500 home runs while maintaining a career .300 batting average (joining Hall-of-Famers: Babe Ruth, Jimmie Foxx, Mel Ott, Ted Williams, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, and later joined by Manny RamÃrez and Albert Pujols).
- Thomas is also on a short list of players to hit 500 career home runs and accrue at least 1,600 walks. The others are: Babe Ruth, Mel Ott, Mickey Mantle, Ted Williams and Barry Bonds.
- Thomas was the first player in major league history to win two Silver Slugger Awards each at two different positions (1993â94 at first base; 1991 & 2000 as designated hitter).
- He was only the 11th player in history to win consecutive Most Valuable Player Awards, and the first American League player to do so since Roger Maris in 1960 and 1961.
- He was the third player (Eddie Murray and Hank Aaron) to collect 500 career home runs and 120 career sacrifice flies.
- His 138 walks in the 1991 season was not only the most accrued in a season by any American League player in the 1990s, it was the most for a season by any AL player since 1969 when Harmon Killebrew walked 145 times.
- Thomas’ .729 slugging average for the shortened 1994 season was the highest season mark for an AL player since Ted Williams’ 0.731 slugging average in 1957. Only Mark McGwire’s 0.730 in 1996 has been higher since then.
- In the shortened 1994 season, Thomas achieved an on-base percentage of .494, which was also the highest season mark for an AL player since Ted Williams’ .528 on-base percentage in 1957. No AL player has topped this since.
- Retired as the all-time leader in home runs by a designated hitter (269); David Ortiz later broke his record.
- He is the only player in major league history to hit over 100 sacrifice flies and not collect a single sacrifice bunt, as well as the only player with over 10,000 plate appearances and no sacrifice bunts.
- The White Sox retired his uniform No. 35 during an on-field ceremony on “Frank Thomas Day”, August 29, 2010.
M.L.B. statistics | |||
---|---|---|---|
Batting average | .301 | ||
Hits | 2,468 | ||
Home runs | 521 | ||
Runs batted in | 1,704 |
MLB statistics | |
---|---|
Batting average | .273 |
Hits | 2,408 |
Home runs | 609 |
Runs batted in | 1,667 |
Chicago Cubs Sammy “Slammin’ Sammy” Sosa Belts His 64th and 65th Homers Of The 1998 M.L.B. Regular Season – At Wrigley Field – Chicago, Illinois – đŠđ´ đēđ¸
Chicago Cubs Sammy “Slammin’ Sammy” Sosa Highlights – All 66 Home Runs Of The 1998 M.L.B. Regular Season – đŠđ´ đēđ¸
A Look At Sammy “Slammin’ Sammy” Sosa’s First And Last M.L.B. Career Home Runs – đŠđ´ đēđ¸
Mark McGwire – đēđ¸
Credit: Silent Sensei from Santa Cruz, USA
- Full name — Mark David McGwire Â
- Nickname â “Big Mac”
- Nationality â American đēđ¸
- Career accomplishments –
- 12àAll-Star (1987â1992, 1995â2000)
- 2àWorld Series champion (1989, 2011)
- AL Rookie of the Year (1987)
- Gold Glove Award (1990)
- 3àSilver Slugger Award (1992, 1996, 1998)
- 5àMLB home run leader (1987, 1996â1999)
- NL RBI leader (1999)
- Athletics Hall of Fame
- St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame
- Major League Baseball All-Century Team
Accomplishment | Record | Date(s) | Refs |
---|---|---|---|
Major League Baseball records | |||
Fewest at-bats to 500 career home runs | 5,487 | 1999 | |
Fewest career at bats per home run | 10.6 | ||
Home runs in a four-season period | 245 | 1996â1999 | |
Consecutive 50-HR seasons | 4 | ||
50-HR seasons | 4 | ||
Consecutive 60-HR seasons | 2 | 1998â1999 | |
Home runs in a two-season period | 135 | ||
Single-season highest RBI/H ratio | 1.014 | 1999 | |
Oakland Athletics records | |||
Lowest career AB/HR ratio | 12.1 | ||
Career HR | 363 | ||
Lowest single-season AB/HR ratio | 8.1 | 1995, 1996 | |
St. Louis Cardinals records | |||
Lowest career AB/HR ratio | 7.9 | ||
Highest career OPS | 1.222 | ||
Highest career OPS+ | 180 | ||
Highest career SLG | .683 | ||
Lowest single-season AB/HR ratio | 7.3 | 1998 | |
Most HR in a season | 70 | ||
Most times on base in a season | 320 | ||
Most bases on balls in a season | 162 |
Summer Olympics | ||
---|---|---|
1984 Los Angeles | Team | |
Pan American Games | ||
1983 Caracas | Team | |
Intercontinental Cup | ||
1983 Brussels | Team |
St. Louis Cardinals Mark “Big Mac” McGwire Highlights – All 70 Home Runs Of The 1998 M.L.B. Regular Season – đēđ¸
1998 M.L.B. Regular Season – Race For The All-Time M.L.B. Single Season Home Run Record – Mark “Big Mac” McGwire & Sammy “Slammin’ Sammy” Sosa – đŠđ´ đēđ¸
1986-1992 Oakland Athletics Bash Brothers Highlights – Mark “Big Mac” McGwire and Jose “The Chemist” Canseco Home Runs Compilation – đēđ¸
Sources: E.S.P.N.âhttps://www.espn.com, M.L.B.âhttps://www.mlb.com, YouTubeâhttps://www.youtube.com