In 1941,Joe Dimaggio probably set all kinds of records that will never be broken.He batted .357,30 home runs,125 rbi's accumulated 193 hits,had 541 official at bats and struck out only 13 times.His strikeout to most anything ratio is probably unreachable when almost every batter today strikes out many times that amount.Hitters back then used to choke up with two strikes to keep the ball in play.This made for a more interesting brand of baseball when more plays were on the field of play rather than a boring strikeout when the hitter swings from his heels with two strikes.
You can add Young's 315 losses and 826 decisions as untouchable, too.I always felt 511 wins was the most unbreakable record. 20+ wins in 25 seasons. Never again.
The 13 strikeouts by Joe D. was big. It shows how the game has changed. Back then everyone tried to make contact with two strikes. Today, no one ever chokes up. Wade Boggs only struck out 31 times one season and the made a huge thing about it. Now its standard for a power hitter to strike out over 100 times.
A previous thread noted an article that said that who ever between Gino and Tara end up with the most wcbb coaching wins will likely hold the record forever, or at least for a very long time. Major programs don't hire young, unproven coaches as they did 30 years ago and that kind of thing. My prediction is that after Gino and Tara have both hung it up Gino will have the most wins, and that if that record is broken that not a single Boneyarders alive today will be alive to see it.
Hitting .400 in the Major Leagues. Ted Williams was the last to do it in 1941 hitting .406.
Gloves have almost tripled in size, getting to more balls. Hitters hit for power, not average (strikeouts have sky rockets). More sabermetrics than we really need. "Round ball, round bat, toughest thing to do in sports." Who said that?
Rick Barry made 23 consecutive free throws in one game.
I think without a return to steroids, Bonds' 755 Hr's is pretty safe.
Chief Wilson in 1912 hit 36 triples in one season. Incredible.
Because the NFL is now a passing league, Eric Dickersons' 2105 yards in a season seems safe to me as well.
The 13 strikeouts by Joe D. was big. It shows how the game has changed. Back then everyone tried to make contact with two strikes. Today, no one ever chokes up. Wade Boggs only struck out 31 times one season and the made a huge thing about it. Now its standard for a power hitter to strike out over 100 times.
I heard that said, but off the top of my head without looking it up, can’t recall who said it, but I believe it to be true. Also without looking it up, I believe that the last player to come close to hitting .400 for a complete season was San Diego’s Tony Gwynn at .396
The Cy Young record comes with an asterisk. Leroy “Satchel” Paige pitched in approximately 2500 games over his 30+ year career in the Negro Leagues and eventually MLB. Unfortunately, statistics were not kept in the Negro Leagues, but it is estimated that Paige won as many as 2000 games.
When MLB finally allowed black players, and Paige finally made it to the Show as a 40+ rookie, his remarkable MLB record was 100-50 over 6 seasons. None other than Joe DiMaggio stated that Paige was the greatest pitcher he ever faced. We are left to wonder if Joe D’s 56 game hitting streak would have ever happened if he had to face Paige during that streak.
Unfortunately, Gwynn’s .396 came in a season that was abruptly ended with a players strike. As a result, we will never know if Gwynn could have pushed his average over .400 for the season.I heard that said, but off the top of my head without looking it up, can’t recall who said it, but I believe it to be true. Also without looking it up, I believe that the last player to come close to hitting .400 for a complete season was San Diego’s Tony Gwynn at .396
Thanks for the correction. I had jumbled some of Paige’s stats.Love the Negro League players and Paige was a legend, but his MLB W-L record was 28-31.
I believe the single most “unbreakable” record is the Cy Young one. The specialization in today’s baseball make an already unbreakable record virtually impossible! Geno’s 11 nattys without ever losing a final can proudly stand with the truly difficult ones but Maya’s scoring record, while impressive, is imo not really worthy of that level! I love Maya, but for example, if EDD had stayed and remained healthy, does anyone doubt that she might have scored just as many or more? Other truly great records are Wilt’s 100, a whole slew of Gretzky’s records, Joltin Joe’s hit streak, Ripken’s Iron man record, and one other UConn women’s record that might last longer than even the 11 undefeated NCs! I am referring to the consecutive loss record that is still ongoing with no end in sight! I don’t know the exact number but I believe it is over 900 games and 26 years since we were beaten in two consecutive games? That is truly astonishing and imo may never be approached!
No mention of Brittney Griner's NCAA blocks record? 748 all time. 2nd place is 85 behind. I don't see it being broken anytime in my lifetime.
Nice pun.Carnac scooped you. I was aware of this, that's why I carefully worded it "NCAA record."