Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Soto Surpasses 200 Career Homers at age 25: What Next, and Who Did He Pass?

Soto Surpasses 200 Career Homers at age 25: What Next, and Who Did He Pass?

    'Tis the season of Juan Soto, the winter of his maxing out his free agency, and making a lot of moolah. He is still young and very high up on most of the charts. I wish he would join, or re-join the Washington Nationals. If he joined my second favorite team, the Chicago White Sox, that would be grand.
    
    Not the Dodgers, not the Braves. No, no, and others no. Not the Phillies. Heavens, how many Hall of Fame Nats need to go there? 

    Today I was trying to remember a case when a great player waited to sign till near the end of the off-season, like deep into February. Was it Barry Bonds? Alex Rodriguez? I said Manny Ramirez. I don't know. I told a friend that talks baseball with me that I would Google it. I will. 

    Maybe now.

    Here is Soto's recent achievements by the end of 2024, the Yankees came up short against Los Doyers. It was a year. Kershaw did not play; he was hurt.

    Here is the near 200 club, all time.

    
371.Buddy Bell (18)20110009RHR Log
 Juan Soto (7, 25)2014088LHR Log
 Gene Tenace (15)2015527RHR Log
374.Rafael Devers (8, 27)2004215LHR Log
 Bill Freehan (15)2006900RHR Log
 Oscar Gamble (17)2005197LHR Log
 Josh Hamilton (9)2004350LHR Log
 Adam Lind (12)2005029LHR Log
 Don Mincher (13)2004726LHR Log
 Corey Seager (10, 30)2004442LHR Log
381.César Cedeño (17)1998133RHR Log
 Jackie Jensen (11)1996080RHR Log
 Juan Uribe (16)1996715RHR Log
384.Eric Hosmer (13)1986977LHR Log
 Barry Larkin+ (19)1989057RHR Log
 Justin Turner (16, 39)1986311RHR Log
 Rondell White (15)1985852RHR Log
388.Michael Cuddyer (15)1976102RHR Log
 Dave Henderson (14)1975677RHR Log
 Dick McAuliffe (16)1977162LHR Log
391.Cody Bellinger (8, 28)1964109LHR Log
 Cliff Johnson (15)1964603RHR Log
 Justin Smoak (11)1964750BHR Log
 Ken Williams (14)1965625LHR Log

    How much more will Justin Turner play after age 39? Former Dodger. Bellinger (age 28) is special. Seager, too. Age 30. Devers got pop. He's only 27. I would guess each of those four will be around till 2034, you think? Where will we be?

    I hope to talk about them later. Cuz, baseball is special. It may not be the most exciting, but it brings a special thing to us. Like Ohtani. Amazing prowess.

    Soto and Ohtani together? With Betts? Oy ve.

    Josh Hamilton on this list. A man of travails and hopes. I hope he is okay. Mincher and Tenace look like players before my time. I know about Ken Williams. I think. The later commentator? The Hawk?

Monday, November 18, 2024

Who did Bryce Harper pass in Home Runs in 2024? Well, at Least the Last Few

Who did Bryce Harper pass in Home Runs in 2024? Well, at Least the Last Few

114.Joe Adcock (17)3367305RHR Log
 Bryce Harper (13, 31)3367085LHR Log
116.Robinson Canó (17)3359550LHR Log
 Darryl Strawberry (17)3356326LHR Log
118.Moisés Alou (17)3327913RHR Log
 Bobby Bonds (14)3328090RHR Log
120.Hank Greenberg+ (13)3316098RHR Log
 Derrek Lee (15)3317963RHR Log
 J.D. Martinez (14, 36)3316865RHR Log
123.Shawn Green (15)3287963LHR Log
 Mo Vaughn (12)3286410LHR Log
125.Jermaine Dye (14)3257214RHR Log
 Willie Horton (18)3258052RHR Log
 Justin Upton (16)3257649RHR Log
128.Gary Carter+ (19)3249019RHR Log
 Lance Parrish (19)3247797RHR Log
 Carlos Santana (15, 38)3248780BHR Log
131.Ron Gant (16)3217320RHR Log
132.Vinny Castilla (16)3207384RHR Log
 Troy Glaus (13)3206355RHR Log
134.Jay Bruce (14)3196642LHR Log
 Cecil Fielder (13)3195939RHR Log
 Prince Fielder (12)3196853LHR Log
 Andrew McCutchen (16, 37)3199156RHR Log

He tied Joe Adcock at age 31, for 114th all-time with 336 overall homers? Who was Adcock? He played till age 38 from 1950 to 1966. Started with the Reds for three years, then to the Milwaukee Braves, and finishing with the California Angels, with a touch of Minnesota. No, Cleveland. I guess in 1964 they were the LA Angels? Then California for two years. He had 38 homers in 1956, age 28. His second-best year was 35 long balls in 1961, the great year of Roger Maris.
    Maris should mean something to a few history buffs of baseball. Overall, not one of the career leaders, but was a bright star that out did the single-season record of the Babe. Was it 61 in '61? For the record, the great Maris hit a total of 275 in 11 years. A flash in the pan, as it were, but quite a flash. His second-best year was 39 in 1960, at age 26. 1961, what a season! He was seeing the ball, and must have peaked in strength. Maybe the pitchers were caught unawares, or the back up behind him were raking...

    Robinson Cano and Darryl Strawberry both played 17 years. The Straw man was huge with the Mets, especially 1986, and then the Dodgers. Cocaine may or may not have helped him on the field. Off the diamond, probably not. Oh, yeah, of course Darryl finished with the Yankees in 1999, helping them win two titles. He played in the outfield with my guy Tim Raines. Brief stint in San Fran in 1994 till the strike. That ruined a lot... for me, for everyone. Perhaps it ruined the Giants for a while.

    Cano ended his career with the Mets, Padres, and Braves in 2022, and that was it. Pretty good run.

    I'll let you look through the other names below. I know most of them as they are mostly in my lifetime. Lessee... Yeah, only Hank Greenberg was an oldie but goodie. He finished his Hall of Fame career in 1947. I saw all of the others play during the course of my half century of watching the game.

    Better than football, or soccer, in my opinion.

    

Staying Up Late and Testing the Fates: BYU Loses on a Karma Bitten Night

Staying Up Late and Testing the Fates: BYU Loses on a Karma Bitten Night

    These were late games lately. Trying to get another chunk of audiences. They got me! I would be at some of these games if I could. My old acquaintance in the Green Valley area of central California goes to every game. I try to watch everyone, but I have to miss some because of work, and I was guilted by another acquaintance for other observations of a game for staying home from a church party and watching the game the next week...
    
    We can't have everything, huh? Certainly not as far as unbeaten seasons for the football Cougars...

    "Oh, yeah," I told my wife a day or so later. "This is what it feels like to lose."

    Yep, the great and sometimes lucky, and certainly opportunistic BYU Cougars could not get it done. They had chances, and played till the end, but blew opportunities left and right. Through the whole game.
    
    BYU should have been up at the half by 3, or 7, or 10, or 14. Nope. Tied.

    Then in the third quarter nothing much else on offense. We scored only a field goal the whole second half. And lost in the last possession. There was the dumb turnover on the pooched kick that led to Kansas' only score in the second half.

    And that was it. Jayhawks have beaten us two years in a row, and both times did not have to be that way. Last year the referees were worse when they called no targeting or foul against the egregious hit on Parker Kingston. But Saturday night, the 16th, they missed some fouls too.

    Oh, well. At least it was worse last year.

    BYU earned its own loss. Must improve.

    The offense has to be better. 13 points against Kansas was not good enough at all.

    The D really only gave up 10. Not their fault for the last seven.

    QB and Co lost the game, plus special teams. 

    Arizona State is looking tough. Must-see TV. I am glad there are no church parties scheduled then. No more guilt for watching Saturday football games! Sunday is another matter...

    Undefeated Army plays a tough one-loss Notre-Dame. My IU plays at Ohio State, a huge game! Do I have to get used to Indiana losing again?

    What a season. My main complaint is BYU itself, not playing its game.

    They can, they should, they will. Maybe.

    Stay tuned.