Ichiro, now nearing his 3,000th hit, inspects his bat during a May 2, 2009 “Rewind-the Clock” game against the Oakland Athletics at Safeco Field. / Alan Chitlik, Sportspress Northwest

Ichiro’s status as an everyday major league player effectively ended two years ago when the New York Yankees declined to re-sign the 40-year-old outfielder. Since then, Ichiro has  labored with the Miami Marlins to become the 30th man with 3,000 career hits, which will secure his passage into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Ichiro should reach the plateau any day, remarkable after he hit .229 with a .282 OBP and a career-low 91 hits in parts of 153 games the past season, leaving him 65 hits shy of 3,000 as this season started. Given his age (42) and the limited at-bats he was slated to receive as Miami’s fourth outfielder and left-handed pinch hitter, 3,000 seemed no sure thing even for a player who once routinely collected 40 in a month and four times had more than 50.

But a suddenly re-energized Ichiro (batting .337 in limited plate appearances and now four hits from 3,000) flipped the narrative May 21-23. He delivered a throwback spree of 10 hits in 13 at-bats, including 4-for-4 May 21 against the Washington Nationals and 4-for-5 May 23 vs. the Tampa Bay Rays.

That made Ichiro, at 42 years, eight months, the oldest in history to garner 10 hits in 13 at-bats. The only other 42-year-old to achieve that feat: Cap Anson (42 years, 5 months) 122 years ago in August 1894.

Baseball will acknowledge Ichiro’s 3,000th with a big-picture summary. That will properly focus on his record 10 consecutive 200-hit seasons, his record 262 hits in 2004, two batting titles (2001, 2004) and numerous defensive gems, while including the list of Ichiro’s ancillary deeds: 10 All-Star appearances, 10 Gold Glove and three Silver Slugger awards, plus the 2007 All-Star Game inside-the-park home run (the only such play in ASG history) over Ken Griffey Jr.’s head.

But the big picture isn’t nearly as fascinating as the individual frames that demonstrate how Ichiro amassed 3,000 hits and the history he toppled en route.

Ichiro recorded 242 hits as a rookie in 2001, the most by a first-year major leaguer and the highest single-season total since Bill Terry’s 254 in 1930. That marked the first of a nearly annual shattering of ancient hits records of one kind or another.

After two seasons, Ichiro had 450 hits, most by a player in the first two years in a career, breaking the previous mark of 444 by Lloyd Waner, whose career began in Babe Ruth’s heyday.

The following are the most hits in any spans ranging from four to 10 seasons (the player listed below Ichiro was the previous record holder):

Span Player Years Hits Skinny
4 Years Ichiro Suzuki 2001-04 924 242 hits in 2001, MLB-record 262, ’04
Bill Terry 1929-32 918 2,193 career hits, Hall of Fame, 1954
5 years Ichiro Suzuki 2001-05 1,130 Bat titles in ’01 (.350) and ’04 (.372)
Chuck Klein 1929-33 1,118 2,076 hits in 17 years, HOF, 1980
6 years Ichiro Suzuki 2001-06 1,354 From April 12-June 10 batted .394
Wade Boggs 1983-88 1,274 Homered for 3,000th hit; HOF, 2005
7 years Ichiro Suzuki 2001-07 1,592 1st in history with 3 230-hit years
Jesse Burkett 1895-01 1,526 3 200-hit seasons; elected to HOF, 1946
8 years Ichiro Suzuki 2001-08 1,805 Led AL in hits (213) for fifth time
Paul Waner 1927-35 1,680 .333 BA over 20 tyears; HOF, 1952
9 years Ichiro Suzuki 2001-09 2,030 225 hits despite missing 16 games
Willie Keeler 1894-02 1,905 Had 8 200-hit seasons; HOF, 1939
10 years Ichiro Suzuki 2001-10 2,244 Led AL in hits for record-tying 7th time
Pete Rose 1968-77 2,067 5 200-hit years en route to 4,256 hits
Ichiro made numerous dazzling defensive plays, including this behind-the-back catch. / Alan Chitlik, Sportspress Northwest

Ichiro also broke or matched season and career records held by Shoeless Joe Jackson, Rogers Hornsby, George Sisler, Al Simmons, Joe Medwick and Jackie Robinson, all Hall of Famers. Ichiro’s 242 hits in 2001, to cite one, broke the record of 233 by Shoeless Joe in 1911. Ichiro also led the AL in stolen bases (56) in 2001, the first to top the average and swipe charts since Robinson in 1949.

Nearly every time Ichiro’s name appeared on a hit chart or graphic during the prime of his career, the rest of the players on the list had inevitably been dead for a half a century. Now, when we peruse the list at baseballreference.com of the 10 hitters most statistically comparable to Ichiro, it’s no surprise that six played before World War II, including five whose careers ended before 1930.

The most similar: Zack Wheat, a 1959 Hall of Famer whose career started in 1909 and ended in 1927. By contrast, of the 10 players most similar to Griffey, only one, Mel Ott (1926-47), played the bulk of his career before World War II.

Player Career Gms. Hits BA OPS Teams
Zack Wheat 1909-27 2410 2884 .317 .817 Brooklyn Superbas, A’s
Ichiro 2001-16 2440 2996 .314 .762 Mariners, Yankees, Marlins

Ichiro produced dozens of jaw-droppers in his pursuit of 3,000. We won’t dwell on his non-batting feats, such as the fact he once stole an American League-record 45 bases (April 19, 2006-May 16, 2007) without getting caught.

  • Ichiro’s average reached .300 in his 10th career at-bat (2001) and has never fallen below .300. During his prime years, it was .331. Ichiro would have to go approximately 0-for-500 for it to dip under .300.
  • A slap hitter who practically patented the 100-foot infield single, Ichiro drew the same number of intentional walks – 172 – during his time with the Mariners as Griffey, who bombed 630 career home runs. Ichiro also drew more IBBs than Rose (167), Roberto Clemente (167), Rod Carew (144) Cal Ripken Jr. (100) and Rickey Henderson (61). Another thing: Edgar Martinez, a two-time batting champion and career .312 hitter, drew 113 IBBs in 18 seasons with the Mariners to Ichiro’s 172 in 12.
  • Ichiro led the decade of the 2000s in hits (2,030) despite not playing in its first year, 2000. Had he played in 2000, and even with a terrible season, he would have easily eclipsed the all-time decade record for hits, 2,085 by Hornsby in the 1920s.
  • With 225 hits in 2009, Ichiro became the first with five seasons of 220 or more hits, breaking a tie with Hornsby. Ichiro is also the only player with three seasons of 230-plus hits and the only player to twice collect 200-plus on a 100-loss team (2008, 2010).
  • Ichiro produced career hit No. 1,000 June 14, 2005, becoming the third player since 1900 with 1,000 hits in fewer than 700 games (696). Chuck Klein reached 1,000 in 1933 after 683, and Lloyd Waner in 1932 in 686.
  • Ichiro got hit No. 1,500 July 29, 2007 in his 1,060th game. Only Simmons (1,406) and Sisler (1,048) took fewer.
  • Ichiro collected hit No. 2,000 Sept. 6, 2009, becoming the second fastest to reach that plateau, in 1,402 games. Simmons (1924-44) reached 2,000 in 1,390 (Sisler got there in 1,414).
  • Ichiro bagged hit No. 2,500 June 19, 2012 in his 1,817th game, the fourth-fastest to the mark, following Simmons (1,784), Ty Cobb (1,790) and Sisler (1,808).
  • Ichiro had a career-high five hits four times in 2004, becoming the fifth player with four five-hit games in a season, joining Willie Keeler, 1897; Cobb, 1922; Stan Musial, 1948, and Tony Gwynn, 1993.
Ichiro signs autographs for fans at spring training. / Alan Chitlik, Sportspress Northwest

Ichiro’s 10-for-13 streak from May 21-23 this season was reminiscent of two similar astonishers, both late in 2004.

From Sept. 21-23 against the Angels and Rangers, Ichiro went 11-for-15 (.733 BA, who does that?), including nine hits in two games in Anaheim. During that splurge, Ichiro had hits in eight consecutive at-bats. Weeks earlier, from July 28-Aug. 5, Ichiro did the following, perhaps his greatest spree of all (doubleheader Aug. 3):

Date Opp. Line Sea. BA. Skinny
July 28 at A’s 3-for-5 .341 3 singles, scored a run, drew a walk
July 29 at Angels 5-for-7 .347 4 singles, one double, scored twice
July 30 at Angels 0-for-4 .344 Drew a walk, scored in a 6-5 loss
July 31 at Angels 3-for-6 .346 Home run, two singles, 3 runs scored
Aug. 1 at Angels 2-for-5 .346 2 singles in 3-2 loss to Bartolo Colon
Aug. 3 at Orioles 5-for-5 .354 Triple, four singles, two runs scored
Aug. 3 at Orioles 1-for-1 .355 Pinch single batting for Bucky Jacobsen
Aug. 4 at Orioles 3-for-5 .358 Triple, two singles, one run scored
Aug. 5 at Rays 3-for-6 .359 3 singles, 2 RBIs in 4-2 victory
Totals 25-for-44 +18 pts.

One non-batting Ichiro feat that’s especially amusing: He will likely become the first member of the 3,000-hit club who taught himself Spanish so he could trash talk players from Latin America.

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4 Comments

  1. For his time as a Mariner Ichiro, like Junior, guaranteed something special could happen every time he took the field, either at the plate or in the field. And like Junior, Ichiro played with players like Edgar, Jamie, Beltre, Cameron and Felix and still couldn’t get to the World Series, much less the playoffs more than once. Looking forward to the day when he goes into the HOF as a Mariner. I wonder if they’ll let him wear an Orix Blue Wave hat?

  2. An interesting look at a player who became historic on his first day in MLB and and will continue to be historic for many decades and perhaps even centuries to come.

    This wasn’t a hit, but it was so much a part of Ichiro and the strange magic he could produce on a baseball field. In this YouTube clip he simply scores a run on a double by Cano, but he does it like Fred Astaire might have done it had he played baseball. And right afterward you see a shot of Cano clapping with a look of disbelief on his face.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TJMmVIUmEdw

  3. Maybe the most freakishly talented and smart ballplayer to show up since Willie Mays. His first year I remember him pulling a lot of balls in spring training and Piniella talking to him about that. Ichiro said something along the lines of….he was training pitchers to think a certain way. And Piniella said…”wait a minute. Are you telling me you’re SETTING UP major league pitchers!?” He was astounded.