Curtis Granderson is closing in on the single season triples record.

Search

Rx Wizard
Joined
Oct 25, 2005
Messages
11,731
Tokens
Not talked about much nationally but he has 21 currently and 26 is the all time record. Not 100% sure of the accuracy but I know the numbers are close. This is what was said on the radio today.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

"I like ketchup. It's like tomato wine."
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
10,015
Tokens
And who's was the last Tiger to lead the league in triples????



(Heard this at 3:30am watching the game.)
 

There's no such thing as leftover crack
Joined
Apr 2, 2005
Messages
5,921
Tokens
The most hated player ever I believe. WINNER!!!


(Next to Bonds of course.) :toast:


Last week during a Georgia game in the Little League World Series, some kid was at bat and they said he favorite player was Ty Cobb.
 

Honey Badger Don't Give A Shit
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
46,540
Tokens
26 is the all time single season record for Triples by a Detroit Tiger (Wahoo Sam Crawford in 1914)

CHIEF WILSON, then a Pittsburgh Pirate, wracked 36 triples in 1912.

Seven other players, all in years prior to the 20th century, had single season numbers between Crawford's 26 and Wilson's 36.

Crawford is also the all time leader in three baggers with 309.
 

Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
34,790
Tokens
Tigers’ Granderson redefining leadoff role

By Jeff Passan, Yahoo! Sports May 21, 3:44 am EDT



He doesn’t get the hubbub. The way Curtis Granderson figures, leadoff hitters actually lead off only once a game, so all of the attention they garner – it’s them and cleanup hitters with the recognizable nicknames, after all – isn’t necessarily warranted.
Perhaps it was the romantic notion of the leadoff hitter: the scrapper who fouls off pitches and gets on base and dashes from first to third and manufactures runs, intangibles idealized. That player, of course, is a relic in the steroid and sabermetric eras, generally inefficient, and the prototype has evolved into Leadoff 2.0, the type of player Granderson and others across the game embody.
They can run, yes, but they also hit for serious power, enough that they’d fit just fine in the No. 3 hole, the lineup’s true glamour spot. And some of them have moved there, only to end up back at leadoff, because the luxury of such players hitting first has proved a narcotic to managers, something that no matter how much they try to wean themselves off it, the pangs are too strong.
<TABLE class=sportsTable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=2 width=270 border=1><TBODY><TR><TD colSpan=3>Most extra-base hits, leadoff hitter, 2000s</TD></TR><TR><TD>Player </TD><TD>Year </TD><TD>XBH </TD></TR><TR><TD>Grady Sizemore </TD><TD>2006 </TD><TD>92</TD></TR><TR><TD>Alfonso Soriano </TD><TD>2002 </TD><TD>89</TD></TR><TR><TD>Curtis Granderson </TD><TD>2007 </TD><TD>81</TD></TR><TR><TD>Jimmy Rollins</TD><TD>2007 </TD><TD>80</TD></TR><TR><TD>Alfonso Soriano </TD><TD>2006 </TD><TD>79</TD></TR><TR><TD>Jimmy Rollins </TD><TD>2006 </TD><TD>78</TD></TR><TR><TD>Alfonso Soriano </TD><TD>2007 </TD><TD>77</TD></TR><TR><TD>Alfonso Soriano </TD><TD>2003</TD><TD>75</TD></TR><TR><TD>Darin Erstad </TD><TD>2000 </TD><TD>70</TD></TR><TR><TD>Gary Matthews Jr. </TD><TD>2006 </TD><TD>69</TD></TR><TR><TD>Craig Biggio </TD><TD>2004 </TD><TD>69</TD></TR><TR><TD>Shannon Stewart </TD><TD>2000 </TD><TD>69</TD></TR><TR><TD>Hanley Ramirez</TD><TD>2007 </TD><TD>68</TD></TR><TR><TD>Brian Roberts </TD><TD>2005 </TD><TD>68</TD></TR><TR><TD>Johnny Damon </TD><TD>2000 </TD><TD>68</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
“I need to set the tone, and that can be done a number of ways,” said Granderson, the 27-year-old Detroit Tigers center fielder. “You could have your old-school taking pitches so you get the pitch count up and let the hitters behind you see everything the pitcher has. But if you’re a guy who can drive the baseball, you’re going to be aggressive and set the tone by either getting on base, getting an extra-base hit or, possibly, starting the game off 1-0.”
Granderson more or less described himself, and last season he finished fifth in the American League in slugging percentage. His divisional and positional peer, Cleveland’s Grady Sizemore, socked 92 extra-base hits the year before.
Philadelphia’s Jimmy Rollins won the National League MVP from the leadoff spot last season, though his numbers paled compared to Florida’s Hanley Ramirez, still only 24. The Mets’ Jose Reyes, the speediest of all leadoff hitters, packs good pop, and Arizona’s Chris Young hit 32 home runs and fell three stolen bases shy of being the majors’ first 30-30 rookie. And we can’t forget the leadoff hitter who best epitomizes the power surge – and the most misplaced – Alfonso Soriano, who must be telekinetic with his ability to convince manager after manager that keeping him hitting first is a stroke of brilliance.
All seven players share one characteristic in addition to hitting dynamism, and that’s foot speed, which remains a prevailing factor behind batting first – though not the only, as Kevin Youkilis (95 games in 2006) and Paul Lo Duca (44 in 2001) can attest. It’s managers’ last gasp at the classic leadoff hitter instead of one who resembles Rickey Henderson, baseball’s greatest power-and-speed combination at the top of the lineup since Ty Cobb.
“It used to be getting the small guy up there with a small strike zone to make the pitcher uncomfortable,” Granderson said, rattling off heights – Reyes at 6-foot, him and Soriano 6-1, Sizemore and Young 6-2, Ramirez 6-3, all gargantuan save for Rollins, who, at 5-8 (in spikes), suffers no Napoleon complex.
“Things have changed. It’s a challenge. And I love it.”
Granderson didn’t envision himself a leadoff hitter. Throughout the minor leagues, he hit second. Then, in 2005, the Tigers tinkered with Granderson leading off and knew they hit jackpot: 30-homer power and 30-steal speed with plenty of room to improve, if he can cut down on his strikeouts.
“We don’t really have a prototype leadoff guy, and I’m not really sure he’s that type,” Tigers manager Jim Leyland said. “But he’s good.”
Leyland understands the value of Granderson hitting leadoff because in his first season managing he had a similar hitter at No. 1. Spindly, left-hander, good power, very good speed.
Now, Barry Bonds is baseball’s home run king.
“I had Bonds hit a lot of leadoff home runs,” Leyland said.
Eventually, Leyland understood the power played better with Bonds in the No. 3 and No. 4 spots, so he moved down. Cleveland tried that with Sizemore last year, cognizant that between 1963 and 1994, no one had 92 extra-base hits in a season. The experiment at No. 3 lasted eight games. The Marlins have been hitting Ramirez in the third hole for the last two weeks after trying him there for more than a month last season, and his OPS drops 140 points from when he hits leadoff. The biggest surprise this season, Pittsburgh’s Nate McLouth, has slid down from the leadoff spot, where he hit seven home runs, to the No. 2 hole, where he added five more, to third, where he still is looking for his first.
For now, Granderson will stay in Detroit’s leadoff spot, as much a product of the firepower behind him – Miguel Cabrera and Magglio Ordoñez and Carlos Guillen and whatever’s left of Gary Sheffield – as his own inconsistency this season. After missing the season’s first three weeks because of a fractured middle finger, he returned with five home runs in his first 11 games. Granderson snapped a 12-game drought with another home run Tuesday, and though his .244 batting average is unsightly, his .511 slugging percentage more than makes up for it.
“I think he’s a guy who can go down in the lineup at some point in his career,” Leyland said. “But he’s still in the process of learning how to knock in runs, and he’s really the one true piece of speed we have.”
So every game, Granderson trots into the batter’s box first for the Tigers, his job multifold. He needs to be the nag, the pest, the one who makes people uncomfortable, who grinds out at-bats to the tune of 4.37 pitches per, second best in the AL. And he needs to hit for power along the way, the 20-20-20-20 season last year – 20-plus doubles, triples, home runs and stolen bases – setting a mighty standard.
No one said being Leadoff 2.0 is easy. Which is just how Granderson likes it.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,569
Messages
13,452,551
Members
99,423
Latest member
lbplayer
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com