The Most Unbreakable Career Baseball Records

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @stevegallo8483
    @stevegallo8483 2 года назад +196

    I would put Nolan Ryan's 7 career no hitters in the class of unbreakable records, as pitchers getting complete games are rare enough. Others include Ty Cobb's career batting average and Cal Ripken's consecutive games played.

    • @halecj1
      @halecj1 Год назад +3

      I would agree because Ryan is the best ball player ever IMO, but one day an absolute savage could come in and throw multiple no-nos over several seasons. Most if not all of the records on this list are things you can only accomplish over a long career while staying healthy just about the entire time.

    • @deathmetal11111
      @deathmetal11111 Год назад +1

      I disagree. 7 no-hitters are probably one of the easier ones to break. Verlander has 3 which makes him tied for third place all-time. Which is pretty good in the context of these other records. No-hitters are up even with shutouts down.

    • @smoceany9478
      @smoceany9478 Год назад +1

      yea but using the calculation in this video, it would take at most 7 years to get this record, cause theres atleast 1 no hitter every year

    • @user-uo8yh9tb8g
      @user-uo8yh9tb8g Год назад +10

      @@deathmetal11111 Easier? IMO Verlander is great just for having 3, but in no way does that mean getting twice as many plus one is "easy"... I just don't see it, as pitchers simply don't pitch as many innings and games as Ryan did in his day... well, I'll say this.... I'm 60, and no way in hell is that getting broken in my life-time... it would take a lot of luck too as both Ryan and the great Bob Feller had 12 one-hitters!

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад +2

      Those records are not sacred. They can be beaten. It just may be awhile before it happens.

  • @cteal2018
    @cteal2018 Год назад +201

    Robin Ventura getting 7 hits from Nolan Ryan in 1 AB will never be broken...

    • @randolphkersey5155
      @randolphkersey5155 Год назад +5

      🤣

    • @adamsmith3238
      @adamsmith3238 Год назад +4

      LOL

    • @calibre97
      @calibre97 Год назад +5

      ahHHHH HAHAHAHA! That took me a hot second but damn, that's harsh but very very very funny.

    • @CVSoprano
      @CVSoprano Год назад +6

      WINNER! WINNER! CHICKEN DINNER!

    • @danacoleman4007
      @danacoleman4007 Год назад +4

      Now there's a stat he can be proud of!

  • @33sarny
    @33sarny Год назад +398

    This is the record which will never be broken: Johnny Vander Meer's Two Consecutive No-Hitters. A pitcher would need to pitch three consecutive no hitters to break this record

    • @samuelmoulds1016
      @samuelmoulds1016 Год назад +13

      yeah, but they keep trying!

    • @robertlosasso4222
      @robertlosasso4222 Год назад

      @@samuelmoulds1016 you haven’t seen two yet let alone three . This is the one record that will never be broken . One good reason ,today’s pitchers are pussys .

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад +17

      A highschool kid in Texas pitched 7 consectutive no-hitters several years back. I wonder what ever happened to him.

    • @robertlosasso4222
      @robertlosasso4222 Год назад +14

      @@blu3collar949 Your talking about high school .what’s that got to do with anything? There’s been hundreds of kids that look like the Hall of Fame will never hold them and they wind up in the crapper . The pressure gets greater and greater as you climb the ladder . This kid from Texas hopefully got a good education and went on to live a normal life .

    • @DCG550
      @DCG550 Год назад +1

      Agree 100%.

  • @zackaryhaselius2226
    @zackaryhaselius2226 2 года назад +135

    Ted Williams career OBP of .482 is one of the most insane stats ive ever seen.

    • @erichvonmanstein6876
      @erichvonmanstein6876 2 года назад +1

      It aint all that

    • @zackaryhaselius2226
      @zackaryhaselius2226 2 года назад +20

      @@erichvonmanstein6876 okay dude. Thats literally almost on base every 2nd at bat.

    • @erichvonmanstein6876
      @erichvonmanstein6876 2 года назад +2

      @@zackaryhaselius2226 no its not kid. Its every PLATE APPEARANCE big difference .........."dude"🤨

    • @JahWontPayTheBill
      @JahWontPayTheBill 2 года назад +9

      @Erich Von Manstein
      OBP is determined from both at bats and plate appearances. Also the specific outcomes of each. Look up the formula used.
      It’s “approximately” equal to Times on Base/Plate Appearances.

    • @zackaryhaselius2226
      @zackaryhaselius2226 2 года назад +20

      @@erichvonmanstein6876 what the frick are you talking about? Im saying according to his OBP, Hes getting On-base almost 50% of the time. youre not making since.

  • @chaosawaits
    @chaosawaits 2 года назад +99

    Ty Cobb's career batting average will also probably never be broken (.366). 7 MVP's by Barry Bonds seems pretty difficult. Ted Williams career OBP (.482) seems unbreakable; only 4 players who've played over the last 60 years have even cracked the top 25.

    • @deathmetal11111
      @deathmetal11111 Год назад +14

      Yeah but those are rate stats. Some hot shot rookie could conceivably put up those numbers for a couple of years, get to the minimum required plate appearances to count their career rate numbers then suffer a career ending injury. No one's pitching 700 CG.

    • @jonathancarroll941
      @jonathancarroll941 Год назад +8

      Barry Bonds cheated his way in the record book. That's why he never got into the hall of fame

    • @a.grimes4202
      @a.grimes4202 Год назад +1

      ​@@jonathancarroll941 He didn’t cheat. He didn’t get in because the dumbass voters snubbed him out of jealousy of his natural skill.

    • @jonathancarroll941
      @jonathancarroll941 Год назад +3

      @@a.grimes4202 he did just like Mark McGuire and Jose Canseco. They all used steroids that's called cheating

    • @a.grimes4202
      @a.grimes4202 Год назад +1

      @@jonathancarroll941 He never used steroids. You’re full of *🐂💩* .

  • @johnnyeaton
    @johnnyeaton 2 года назад +51

    One of my feelings, not really a thought, is sadness at the fact that we may never see another Game 7 complete game shutout again. The combined no-hitter by the Astros made me yearn for Jack Morris in '91 spinning all those masterful innings. It's hard to imagine a manager letting his starting pitcher finish a game now, let alone let him keep going into extras with his shutout. RIP the fantastic baseball of my 80s youth. :(

    • @andrem.thomas332
      @andrem.thomas332 2 года назад +4

      I watched that Twins game and Morris was amazing but time goes on. People who watched before us said the same thing about our era. Era's should be more appreciated than argued about in my opinion.

    • @johnnyeaton
      @johnnyeaton 2 года назад +3

      @@andrem.thomas332 I agree. I wish I was alive for many of baseball's eras. The only one I've lived through that I didn't really enjoy was the peak steroids era. This current one is alright, but I used to pitch, so I'm biased because I enjoy starting pitchers dominating and going deep into games.

    • @andrem.thomas332
      @andrem.thomas332 2 года назад +2

      @@johnnyeaton
      Bro I'm 44 and raised in Oakland. I remember watching Dave Stewart win 20 games a year repeatedly. If I'm not mistaken it was Glavine pitching against Morris that game 7. I'm just trying my best to not become the old guy always bringing up his era because I hated those guys.

    • @johnnyeaton
      @johnnyeaton 2 года назад +2

      @@andrem.thomas332 I have loved hearing the generations before me talk about the baseball they grew up with. It's a nostalgia that I appreciate.

    • @alexparker3277
      @alexparker3277 2 года назад +2

      nah, some guy like Alcantra is gonna get put in that spot by some old school manager. Just give it like 20 years.

  • @williamseifert169
    @williamseifert169 2 года назад +377

    Cal Ripken's 2632 consecutive games record will NEVER be broken.
    The fact that it's not on this list is absurd.

    • @PHELTHY49plus20
      @PHELTHY49plus20 2 года назад +22

      I was gonna comment the EXACT same thing...I thought for SURE that would be number 1... not even an honorable mention

    • @eolsunder
      @eolsunder 2 года назад +12

      i know right? people and their dumb lists, which aren't even good lists. At 2600+ games, the closest anyone has gotten since that record is about 1100

    • @bryanmichael108
      @bryanmichael108 2 года назад +14

      I cannot believe Ripken’s streak is not in the list. It would over 16 years playing all 162 games per year to break the record. Not happening!

    • @erichvonmanstein6876
      @erichvonmanstein6876 2 года назад +10

      I would hope they left it off because its automatically a concensus choice as one to never be broken..........i hope thats why🤷

    • @MikeDindu
      @MikeDindu 2 года назад +22

      He replaced Lou Gehrig for that record. People always for decades said the same thing that you did about Ripken that Gehrig's consecutive game streak would NEVER be broken. They were wrong.

  • @TexasSportsTV
    @TexasSportsTV 2 года назад +143

    Also unbreakable. 7 no-hitters by Nolan Ryan.

    • @JahWontPayTheBill
      @JahWontPayTheBill 2 года назад +22

      Nah I could do that

    • @MrVegasdeuce
      @MrVegasdeuce 2 года назад +16

      This one is also a lock. Not enough complete games anymore..

    • @TexasSportsTV
      @TexasSportsTV 2 года назад +9

      @@MrVegasdeuce even with complete games, the second most is 4 which was from the 60s. Verlander only has 3, he is a work horse of a pitcher who's done this a long time. 39 years old. Even with combined no-hitters becoming a thing, it no one's gonna pass it if you include them.

    • @MrVegasdeuce
      @MrVegasdeuce 2 года назад +3

      @@TexasSportsTV yep. You got it dude.

    • @stephenjohnson9632
      @stephenjohnson9632 2 года назад +6

      And Nolan Ryan’s 2,795 career walks is even more untouchable.

  • @edandkarendamadio4108
    @edandkarendamadio4108 Год назад +53

    Well, here's one record that will never be broken. Warren Spahn pitched 20 or more complete games for 13 straight seasons, and hardly anyone ever speaks of it.

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Год назад +3

      different era... today starting pitchers rarely see the 7th inning for one reason or another. I don't remember the last time I saw a complete game. lotta pitchers have a shutout when they retire.. only to have the game lost by the pen. those kindsa things can get pretty depressing but it happens quite often with the way the game is played today.

    • @geoffreyhooker9005
      @geoffreyhooker9005 Год назад +1

      Spahn and Sain, and two days of rain

    • @TigerofRobare
      @TigerofRobare Год назад +2

      Because it's not a record. Cy Young had 20+ complete games for 19 straight seasons. Walter Johnson did it for 16.

    • @kylesloane3815
      @kylesloane3815 Год назад

      This is a season record though, not a career record... Not really eligible for the list

    • @tommybotts
      @tommybotts Год назад

      Spahn was such a workhorse - 363 wins, a 20 game winner for 12 seasons, 382 complete games! Today's pitchers are wimps compared to the guy's of yesteryear. Today's pitchers are programmed to go 7 innings or 100 pitches, (whichever comes first), which means they psychologically start getting tired going into the 6th inning.

  • @robpierce4712
    @robpierce4712 2 года назад +42

    Two records that Ted Williams also holds which likely will never be broken. In 1949, he reached base in 84 consecutive games. In 1957, he reached base in 16 straight plate appearances. I think we will likely see Dimmagio's 56 game hitting streak broken before either of these records are broken.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад +4

      Agreed. BTW, the day the Pete Rose's streak was broken he didn't see a single strike the entire game. The opposing team had announced in advance that they were going to stop the streak, so they just never gave him a hittable pitch.

    • @impairedthoughts4701
      @impairedthoughts4701 Год назад

      16 straight plate appearances will most likely be the first of theses records to go, simply because anyone can hot streak at any given time.

    • @Robertstevens11567
      @Robertstevens11567 Год назад +1

      I could see the 16 straight appearances at some point. Not the 84 games though. Baseball is weird enough that Yermin Mercedes a guy who didn’t make it through his rookie year started his career with 8.

    • @MRCANTGETANAME
      @MRCANTGETANAME Год назад +1

      Facing a series of “wild pitchers” could definitely play a huge factor in reaching base in 16 consecutive plate appearances.

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад

      The 16 straight plate appearances reaching base has never been verified.

  • @Gromit801
    @Gromit801 2 года назад +5

    Loved watching Rickey turn walks into triples, and thoroughly messing with a pitchers head.

  • @pauledmonds3380
    @pauledmonds3380 2 года назад +28

    Could have added another Cy Young record to this list as well. He also holds the major league record for losses as well.

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Год назад

      well he WAS a popular guy...

    • @4ak458
      @4ak458 Год назад

      Who pitches both games of a double header now days? Think maybe he was.worn out a few of those times?

    • @geoffreyhooker9005
      @geoffreyhooker9005 Год назад

      @@4ak458 He never pitched a night game. He never had to stay seated on overnight travel (sleeper cars on the train).

  • @AndThatsBaseball
    @AndThatsBaseball 2 года назад +19

    The Phil Coke experiment had me dying lmao I love how they chose him

    • @BaseballsNotDead
      @BaseballsNotDead  2 года назад +7

      Yeah, that experiment always stuck in my brain, even though it was only a small thing on Reddit.

  • @blakesarjent3963
    @blakesarjent3963 2 года назад +27

    Listening to this and trying to comprehend how these guys did this is just absolutely mind boggling. 7,000 innings and over 500 wins is just ridiculous to think about in the majors. Still am mind blown while writing this! Need more content like this!

    • @stephenconnors7380
      @stephenconnors7380 2 года назад +2

      And Young did it without suffering an arm injury too.

    • @n9wff
      @n9wff Год назад

      ​@@stephenconnors7380
      We don't know. Many in the old days rubbed dirt on it and played through many injuries.
      Today, they get a tweak and they go on the disabled list.

    • @whitneymacdonald4396
      @whitneymacdonald4396 Год назад

      Satchel Page made Cy Young look like a short reliever in today's game. Dude basically could throw all day every day when he was young, and look like Nolan Ryan doing it.

    • @kylesloane3815
      @kylesloane3815 Год назад +1

      ​@@n9wffwhoa, they really did that and rubbed dirt on their arms and it worked?! Wow. I'm speechless. I always wondered how they pitched so many times.

  • @HeWhoIsNamedPatrick
    @HeWhoIsNamedPatrick 2 года назад +14

    I love the thing rose said when asked should he be in the Hall of Fame, he said a player could hit 200 hits for 20 years and still be hundreds short of his record

    • @freddieknapp9337
      @freddieknapp9337 2 года назад +4

      wanna bet? lol

    • @creepycrespi8180
      @creepycrespi8180 Год назад +4

      @@freddieknapp9337 Pete Rose would make that bet.

    • @davidmartinez52420
      @davidmartinez52420 Год назад +3

      Rose would be somewhere between 6th and 9th(I forget where off the top of my head)on the all time hits list with just his singles alone.

    • @MetFanMac
      @MetFanMac Год назад +1

      @@davidmartinez52420 He would actually be 15th.

    • @Blokewood3
      @Blokewood3 3 месяца назад

      So...does being in the record book inherently mean he is entitled to the hall of fame?

  • @stephenconnors7380
    @stephenconnors7380 2 года назад +16

    My candidate for an unbreakable record is Phil Knell's 54 hit batters in 1891. You know he had to have had a lot of near misses too. Nowadays, if any pitcher hit that many batters guys would be charging the mound right and left. Poor Phil wouldn't survive the season. He'd be beaten to a pulp.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад

      Was the ball softer?

    • @MetFanMac
      @MetFanMac Год назад +4

      @@GeraldM_inNC Not so much softer as just made of worse material. There were also way, WAY fewer ball substitutions, so that by the end of the game they were usually playing with something resembling a hackysack.

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Год назад +3

      Plus pitchers could legally doctor the ball so much it made it a lot more unpredictable. Balls were cut with razor blades, substances put on them, scuffed, sand papered, shoe polished. Catchers really had to be sharp as they often couldn't predict where the damn thing would end up.

    • @davidbernier5782
      @davidbernier5782 Год назад

      And I don’t reckon they were throwing 100 mph!

  • @northstarjakobs
    @northstarjakobs Год назад +3

    Since this video came out before the 2023 rule changes, we have seen a 50+ steal season (and 60+ and 70+), but even with that, I think that Rickey Henderson's single season and career records (especially the career one) are still safe. Rickey had an ungodly combination of speed, reflexes, and game sense plus durability and longevity.

  • @adamsmith3238
    @adamsmith3238 Год назад +20

    Since you had Pete Rose on there think about this: 4256 hits are crazy right? But someone one of these days will break that record compared to another record he has. At least 500 career starts at 5 different positions ( 1B, 2B, 3B, RF, and LF.) It will never be broken because players just aren't versatile like that anymore

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Год назад +3

      tell you what that guy was a helluva player. he was a "slapstick" hitter. just get the ball over the first baseman's head! I used to watch him he hardly ever made an attempt to take a huge cut at anything. I mean when Bonds walked up there everybody KNEW he meant business. the pitcher (no matter who he was) was gonna get a hitting lesson. but not Rose. these guys were both great hitters.. but for entirely different reasons.

    • @geoffreyhooker9005
      @geoffreyhooker9005 Год назад +2

      and their managers won't make the stars move

    • @whitneymacdonald4396
      @whitneymacdonald4396 Год назад

      I bet you're right. Also played his whole career as a complete a**hole.

    • @beekerakadjsnaxx6133
      @beekerakadjsnaxx6133 6 месяцев назад

      @@whitneymacdonald4396 And? So? What does that have to do with anything?

    • @thomasgassert7673
      @thomasgassert7673 6 месяцев назад

      Rose actually hit the ball hard. Doubles were his game by taking the extra base. Pitchers used to try to blow the fastball by him but they couldn't and he had crazy contact and bat control to boot. 4256 will last forever and a day imo.

  • @matthewswanson5623
    @matthewswanson5623 2 года назад +3

    Love your channel! Never been a big stats guy, just loved playing and watching as a kid. Content like yours and trying to keep up with my son's stats, makes it a lot more interesting. Long live Baseball!

  • @rafaelramirez1507
    @rafaelramirez1507 2 года назад +7

    I remember back in 1973 Yankees where Chicago White Sox Ace Wilbur Wood started both games of a double header against the New York Yankees

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад +2

      Wood was a knuckleballer. He only threw the ball 55 to 60 miles and hour. His fastball was only 76MPH. LOL. Pretty hard to hurt your arm like that.

    • @robertlosasso4222
      @robertlosasso4222 Год назад

      That wasn’t uncommon, there was a pitcher for the Dodgers who came close to pitching a complete doubleheader.

  • @mullet75
    @mullet75 2 года назад +14

    Hack Wilson’s 190 RBI in a season has always seemed unbreakable to me

    • @edwardcook2973
      @edwardcook2973 2 года назад +2

      He actually had 191 rbi's in 1930, not 190.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад +1

      There are so many solo home runs today and such low batting averages, Wilson's record seems safe. The Yankees have spent the past 5 years living on solo home runs.

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад +3

      @@edwardcook2973 They added 1 RBI to his record back about 20 years ago. Some sporting reporter noticed an error in one of the games box scores. For years it was 190 though.

  • @BootJarhead
    @BootJarhead 2 года назад +48

    316 career losses by Cy Young. Due to pitcher usage and players being on a shorter leash.

    • @jakesorrentino7230
      @jakesorrentino7230 Год назад +2

      You could break that if the manger refuses to give you up lol

    • @a.grimes4202
      @a.grimes4202 Год назад +2

      316? *WHAT?!*

    • @ILDomer17
      @ILDomer17 Год назад +3

      By extension, career decisions is also a record owned by Cy Young that will never be broken

    • @jackaltwinky77
      @jackaltwinky77 Год назад +1

      @@a.grimes4202Cy Young’s career decision record is 511-315… He was the pitcher of record 826 times.
      Nolan Ryan is in 3rd in all time losses (324-292), and the only one in the top 4 who was not born in the 1800s.
      But pitching 27 seasons, and only really getting hurt to end his career allowed him to pitch a long time…
      He also leads the MLB in career walks with 2,795, leading second place by over 900 (Steve Carlton).

    • @a.grimes4202
      @a.grimes4202 Год назад

      @@jackaltwinky77 I was just making a stupid joke.

  • @andrethered1
    @andrethered1 Год назад +4

    On May 1, 1920 the Braves and Robins played at Boston in front of a crowd of 2,000 spectators. Joe Oeschger started for the Braves, and Leon Cadore started for the Robins. The game was eventually ruled a tie after 26 innings because of darkness. Oescheger only gave up 9 hits the entire game, while Cadore allowed 15. Both pitchers pitched the entire game, that will never happen again.

  • @impairedthoughts4701
    @impairedthoughts4701 2 года назад +64

    Cal Ripken Jr was straight games. His record is safe.

    • @MrVegasdeuce
      @MrVegasdeuce 2 года назад

      Yep

    • @jj18057
      @jj18057 2 года назад

      100%

    • @christopherkimber7679
      @christopherkimber7679 2 года назад

      Absolutely. Iron man’s record is safe.

    • @JonSmith-hk1bq
      @JonSmith-hk1bq 2 года назад

      @@christopherkimber7679 I'm old enough to remember when Gehrig's record was routinely called "unbreakable". Heck, it was still being called unbreakable back when Ripkin passed Everett Scott's then 2nd place mark.

    • @ToABrighterFuture
      @ToABrighterFuture 2 года назад +3

      To break Ripken's record, would take 16 full 162-game seasons, with another 41 games on top of THAT.
      So, someone would need to play over a decade and a half, with no injuries, no suspensions, probably no midseason trades, no extended strikes or lockouts, and not even a single DNP-CD.
      GOOD. LUCK. With that.

  • @CGlied
    @CGlied Год назад +8

    Good video. I like the methodology. Surprised that Nolan Ryan's 2,795 Walks is not on the list. Only 2 pitchers have passed 100 BB in season in the past 10 full years and no active pitcher even has 900 walks. I would think it would take someone 30+ years of leading the league to catch that one too.

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Год назад

      A lot of that is modern hitters having much higher strike out rates compared to older players. They just all swing at so many bad pitches. Some of that is due to guys throwing harder forcing you to make a decision faster but a lot is due to bad plate discipline.

    • @kylesloane3815
      @kylesloane3815 Год назад

      ​@@donpietruk1517a lot better pitching these days too. The average pitcher seems like has 5 different pitches in their arsenal, and that all have different variations of each other. Even just twenty years ago, average pitcher probably had like 3.

  • @royveteto4134
    @royveteto4134 2 года назад +8

    how about connie mack's managerial records . he has managed the most games [7,755] ,wins [3,731] , loses [3,948] , and he managed 1 team for 50 seasons . plus he's the only manager to wear a suit .

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад

      he managed that team because he was part owner of the A's

    • @andrethered1
      @andrethered1 Год назад

      Watch the movie "42", Burt Shotten in 1947 wore a suit while managing the Dodgers after Leo Durocher was suspended for the season. Just happened to be Jackie Robinson's rookie year in the bigs for Brooklyn.

  • @stevenmutzu8940
    @stevenmutzu8940 2 года назад +10

    Jack Taylor completed 187 consecutive games he started between 1901 and 1906.

  • @zacharyanderson5270
    @zacharyanderson5270 2 года назад +7

    These vids are like drugs to me. Good stuff! I would've been interested to see what the list would look like if you just grouped all the dead ball era pitching records into the #1 spot, and then went all the way to #10.

    • @BaseballsNotDead
      @BaseballsNotDead  2 года назад +1

      Here ya go...
      i.postimg.cc/G2xtvSVj/Rankings.png
      Although anything at 19 years or less I'd consider possibly reachable by somebody in the future.

  • @HufflepuffBaseball42313
    @HufflepuffBaseball42313 2 года назад +97

    You think Cy Young’s records are untouchable, but there’s a wild card. Rob Manfred shortening games to three innings in the name of pace of play

    • @The_Loathsome
      @The_Loathsome 2 года назад +4

      😂😂

    • @jasonschwartz9481
      @jasonschwartz9481 2 года назад +9

      @@The_Loathsome what's hilariously horrible is that, while this is an extreme, Mansfield's bad enough to attempt something insane!
      I enjoy a faster paced game. But, c'mon! I hate the strategy taken out of being able to switch pitchers, pitching coaches calling infield meetings. Like, I get wanting to not change a pitcher every batter, but always allow it once per inning where a guy can be pulled after 1 batter THEN make the subsequent pitchers face at least 2.

    • @GeneralBuckNaked
      @GeneralBuckNaked 2 года назад +6

      @Jason Schwartz... I used to love watching super old black & white baseball games. As soon as the catcher throws the ball back to the pitcher, hes winding up to throw again.. It was wayyy faster paced back then

    • @jasonschwartz9481
      @jasonschwartz9481 2 года назад +1

      @@GeneralBuckNaked yeah. I played pro ball for a couple of years. I'm 45 so it was a while ago lol. I hope that the pitch clock does it's job... Switching pitchers should be allowed regardless of batters faced. (I also say this as a guy who spent my first season and a half as a utility guy...sooo, I'm all about getting matchups and pinch hitters lol).
      But, yeah, the older games had a great pace to them. Some of it was because of pitcher dominance at one point. But, also because batters could HIT. As in, a lot fewer deep counts because they made better contact... Not sure l striking out to sell out for the homer. And, yeah, the pitchers definitely didn't waste time... Nor did the batters.

    • @billmcg1676
      @billmcg1676 2 года назад +1

      Fell off my chair laughing. Manfreddy has it as an option I'm sure! 😁😁

  • @IcemanTopGun6
    @IcemanTopGun6 Год назад +4

    Bobby Cox with 158 career managerial ejections will never be broken as long as video review is around.

    • @billysikes1374
      @billysikes1374 Год назад +1

      Braves fan? Lol I am, Went to 4 Braves games, He got ejected from 3 of those, swear

  • @snerdterguson
    @snerdterguson 2 года назад +4

    Harry Chiti will almost certainly be the only major league player who got traded for himself. He was traded for a player to be named and eventually, he was the player to be named and thus sent back to his original team.
    Mariano Riveras ERA+ minimum 1,000 IP is probably untouchable or at least close to it.

  • @dennissvitak148
    @dennissvitak148 Год назад +1

    ALL of the old time pitching records. Complete games, shutouts, innings pitched, wins.

  • @typicalpizza8857
    @typicalpizza8857 Год назад +5

    I feel like 457 total bases in a single season by babe Ruth in 1921 will never be broken even when Barry bonds had 73 home runs in 2001 he was still 46 total base away

  • @cedricgist7614
    @cedricgist7614 Год назад +2

    I didn't know Eddie Collins laid down 512 bunts. That's staggering!
    I know it was the Dead Ball Era and teams had to scratch for runs - but man! Collins was a good hitter and to take his bat away that many times - astounding.

  • @ghijkmnop
    @ghijkmnop 2 года назад +11

    Nolan Ryan - 7 No-hitters
    Joe Dimaggio - 56-game hitting streak
    Rennie Stennett - 7 hits in a 9-inning game
    Ty Cobb - 54 steals of Home
    Cal Ripken, Jr - 2632 Consecutive games played

  • @Bravo_116Cinema
    @Bravo_116Cinema Год назад +1

    Very good video, I am only a baseball novice but your video kept me watching the whole way through.

  • @caliscribe2120
    @caliscribe2120 2 года назад +4

    Babe Ruth to umpire who just called him out looking on a Walter Johnson fastball. "I think it sounded low."

  • @truthiscensored
    @truthiscensored Год назад +1

    TBS still showing every Braves games to this day...I don't know how many teams have been on the exact same station for 40+ years

  • @fishingwithphil7603
    @fishingwithphil7603 2 года назад +3

    Amazing video, the only thing i could say negatively is that you made it seem as if the change in pitching is more important than the workhorse nature of cy young and walter johnson. nolan ryan. three of the greatest workhorses EVER. will never be replicated. Your point was articulated very clearly but i didnt get the impression that you were impressed by walter johnson and cy young, and everybody should be.. amazing video

  • @davidlogan201
    @davidlogan201 Год назад +1

    Baseball back in the old days was a different breed

  • @JD-gk7eh
    @JD-gk7eh Год назад +3

    Cal Ripken's consecutive game streak is good for eternity as well. That requires teams to participate in the process and they just won't do that; they won't let a player go that long without a day off and they'll cut the streak down before it ever even reaches 2 seasons worth.

  • @ninjaswordtothehead
    @ninjaswordtothehead 2 года назад +1

    Great video. Good to know baseball isn't dead, I keep hearing it doesn't exist.

  • @zackaryhaselius2226
    @zackaryhaselius2226 2 года назад +9

    Nolan Ryans 7 No-hitters thrown. Thats so amazing its stupid.

    • @billysikes1374
      @billysikes1374 Год назад

      Koufax only pitched 13 years, Had 5 no hitters, believe 1 was a perfect game, Ryan pitched 26 years

  • @1brusco
    @1brusco Год назад +2

    Bob Gibsons season ERA of 1.12 will never be broken .

  • @mikepuncsak7297
    @mikepuncsak7297 2 года назад +19

    Joe DiMaggio hit safe in 56 straight games will not be broken

    • @ErickMaciasJuarez
      @ErickMaciasJuarez 2 года назад +3

      That one is fascinating. I remember when Jimmy Rollins of the Phillies got to 30-something games straight with a base hit, I was excited but he fell way short

    • @mjwbulich
      @mjwbulich 2 года назад +6

      81 years and no one has gotten closer than Pete Rose did with 44. That one is pretty safe.

    • @erichvonmanstein6876
      @erichvonmanstein6876 2 года назад +1

      Thats not really that big of a record, theres already been 6 dudes that got 40+ streaks. Just give it some time. This will be broke.

    • @nextgencowboy
      @nextgencowboy 2 года назад +1

      Statistically this one will be broken, someday. As will Ted Williams' 84 consecutive games reaching base streak.
      It may take 100 years but the offensive game still plays enough like it did in the 40s for both records to fall.
      Just my opinion but it is the pitching records that are safer, without a paradigm shift.

    • @erichvonmanstein6876
      @erichvonmanstein6876 2 года назад +1

      @@nextgencowboy thank you

  • @zackwilliams9261
    @zackwilliams9261 Год назад +2

    Starting Pitcher Old Hoss Radbourn's 60 wins in one season will NEVER be broken.

    • @I_am_coocoo_for_kupo_nuts
      @I_am_coocoo_for_kupo_nuts 3 месяца назад

      That record is impossible to break. Matt Killroy's 513 strikeouts in a season while being possible will never be broken either. A pitcher would have to average over 15.54 strikeouts per start over the course of 33 games. With managers pulling starting pitchers early this record will never be broken aswell. 75 starts in a season by Pud Galvin and Will White is also impossible unless somene just throws a pitcher out there to just start the game and pulls them early every game.

  • @rentslave
    @rentslave Год назад +3

    Jamie Moyer went 22 years between hitting sacrifice flies.

  • @davidhenderson594
    @davidhenderson594 Год назад +1

    I live in New York and I think I see another trip to Cooperstown this summer. Love going there, you see something different every time.

  • @hijinks21
    @hijinks21 2 года назад +10

    Pete rose was a master of hitting on that old concrete type astroturf. He'd chop down at the ball for this giant bounce that he could beat out an infield hit.
    Can't do that on today's turf.

    • @BrotherApexx
      @BrotherApexx 2 года назад +4

      Man, I didn't even think about that but it makes sense. Shows you how smart and talented he was.

    • @INYB
      @INYB 2 года назад

      Maybe 5% of his hits were infield hits. I chiron had over 100 in one season.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад

      In the dead-ball era that was called the "Baltimore Chop".

  • @mauricealexander9975
    @mauricealexander9975 6 месяцев назад +1

    Out of all the records here, I think shutouts could theoretically be broken. But they would to put up some monster seasons and also have 100% buy-in from the manager and team

  • @tyler3876
    @tyler3876 2 года назад +4

    It’s kinda crazy that 100 years from now, people will still be talking about these legends.

    • @brentvance3958
      @brentvance3958 Год назад +1

      True because 120 years after Cy Young we are still talking about him

    • @tyler3876
      @tyler3876 Год назад

      @@brentvance3958 IKR! If you have those records, you will exist until the very sport of baseball dies.

    • @chrisstephens2984
      @chrisstephens2984 Год назад

      Sure. If humans still walk the earth

  • @tyca659
    @tyca659 Год назад +1

    Those pitching records are nearly all unbreakable (innings, ks, wins, etc).
    The way they used pitchers was so differnt than today.

  • @markpurcell1488
    @markpurcell1488 Год назад +1

    Great work!! Thank you for your hard work figuring this out. God bless.

  • @lestermount3287
    @lestermount3287 2 года назад +4

    Ty Cobb's career batting average, Nolan Ryan's no hitters are two more that will never be broken

  • @jimtruscott5670
    @jimtruscott5670 5 месяцев назад +1

    In 1952 Ron Necciai pitching for Bristol in the Appalachia League, pitched a perfect game. He struck out all 27 batters.

  • @aklestinec
    @aklestinec 2 года назад +3

    Cal Ripken’s record will never be close to being broken based off of current standard of baseball.

    • @robertlosasso4222
      @robertlosasso4222 Год назад

      There were games he only played an inning or two . The rules don’t say you had to play nine innings every time you started a game .

    • @donpietruk1517
      @donpietruk1517 Год назад

      By the end of Ripkins chase it had become a circus side show. He hurt his career and team by refusing to rest. Look at his BP and obp toward the end of the streak. If his dad wasn't the manager he would have been sat down.

  • @mistertwister2000
    @mistertwister2000 Месяц назад +2

    My RTTS player on beginner difficulty: *Child’s play.*

  • @TallulahB58
    @TallulahB58 2 года назад +9

    Fernando Tatis's 2 grand slams in one inning is up there, imo.

    • @kristopherloviska9042
      @kristopherloviska9042 2 года назад +2

      And both were hit off the same pitcher. That accomplishment will never be tied, let alone broken. For someone to break it, the minimum batters to come to the plate in the inning would be 22. That is never going to happen.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад

      Good one!

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад +2

      How about 6 grand slams in one season? Don Mattingly.

    • @andrethered1
      @andrethered1 Год назад

      Tatis even hit both grand slams against Chan Ho Park in that inning. He became the second pitcher to allow two grand slams in one inning, joining Whoa Bill Phillips (1890) in the record books.

  • @woodyboyd2961
    @woodyboyd2961 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hack Wilson's 191 RBI (1930) & 159 RBI (1929), single season and 2 consecutive seasons' totals (154 game/season). I get it CAREER records, but these are remarkable considering the PED era and the rash of dingers hit by many individuals.
    Barry Bonds 2558 BB (career), 232 BB (2004).
    Joe Sewell 62.5 AB/K (career), 3 Ks (1930, 1932), BB:K ratio 7:39 (career), ~17:1 (1932)

  • @thegodfatheroftoys3349
    @thegodfatheroftoys3349 2 года назад +4

    It’s amazing to say this, but as a whole, Ricky Henderson is criminally underrated. The stolen bases aside, his runs scored and his sheer ability to create runs is otherworldly.

    • @LumpyAdams
      @LumpyAdams 2 года назад +2

      He didn't get in the HOF just by stealing bases. He's not underrated. Not everything that's ever happened is cRimInAlLy uNdeRraTeD

    • @thegodfatheroftoys3349
      @thegodfatheroftoys3349 2 года назад +1

      Somebody has an issue with Comprehension

    • @1uckedout
      @1uckedout 2 года назад +1

      @@thegodfatheroftoys3349 Don't rat yourself out

  • @exmarine268
    @exmarine268 Год назад +1

    1.12 ERA - Bob Gibson - 1968 - will never be broken. This should have made your list. No one has really come close.

  • @maldrinjr9629
    @maldrinjr9629 2 года назад +3

    I'm thinking about starting an OOTP save with the sole goal of breaking the all-time sac hits record. Thanks for the inspiration!

    • @BaseballsNotDead
      @BaseballsNotDead  2 года назад +2

      I have an OOTP challenge coming up where I started with the Angels expansion in 1961 and tried to set as many career records by 2022. Should have that coming out in the next two weeks.

    • @maldrinjr9629
      @maldrinjr9629 2 года назад +1

      @@BaseballsNotDead Can't wait to see it! I assume you have a reliever that will go in almost every game while winning for the last out?

    • @BaseballsNotDead
      @BaseballsNotDead  2 года назад +1

      @@maldrinjr9629 Last out in the 4th inning, yes (although you have to have them pitch a full inning or the game will award the win to another reliever).

    • @maldrinjr9629
      @maldrinjr9629 2 года назад

      @@BaseballsNotDead Oh I meant on top of going for the win, going for the career records for games finished and saves

  • @Evilryu4005
    @Evilryu4005 2 года назад

    Great video and Great conversation about some of these records are not going to be broken. Cal Ripken Iron man streak, Joe Dimaggio 56 hitting streak, Ted Williams hitting 400. Before all star break

  • @mtgpackrat7945
    @mtgpackrat7945 2 года назад +26

    Could you imagine witnessing Cy Young's pitching first hand and not realizing at the time the pure legend behind what you were seeing?

    • @daBEAGLE1017
      @daBEAGLE1017 2 года назад +3

      There are MLB player now that you don't realize what you are seeing.

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад

      Young played during a time when baseball players came from lower class jobs, such as farmers. They were not professional star athletes like today. He probably would not last 2 innings in a modern era game of today, against real talented players.

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 Год назад

      He's just lucky child solicitation laws were lax bak then.

    • @schmipps1239
      @schmipps1239 Год назад +4

      Never won the Cy Young though.

    • @jennyanydots2389
      @jennyanydots2389 Год назад +1

      @@schmipps1239 He married his sister though. Had two little water headed babies.

  • @timothybarbano-q2u
    @timothybarbano-q2u Год назад

    SUPER Video ! THANKS FOR ALL YOUR HARD WORK ..'hats off toya"

  • @jamesrobertson9761
    @jamesrobertson9761 2 года назад +3

    That triples record is unreal.

    • @fortynights1513
      @fortynights1513 Год назад

      Another one: The 1991 Brewers went from 43-60 to 83-79; 17 games under .500 to an outright winning record, the most ever in the course of a single season.
      Nowadays if a team was 17 games under .500, they’d probably consider tanking, and have nothing to play for the rest of the season.

  • @JustaGuy_Gaming
    @JustaGuy_Gaming Год назад +1

    More than anything else a lot of old records won't be broken because neither the players nor the teams want to risk their health and career. Which means playing less games, taking less risk etc.

  • @patricksorenson9586
    @patricksorenson9586 2 года назад +3

    I think career IBB is also unbreakable, but your methodology would have brought in some of Bonds insane years since they were more recent.

  • @Snazzeo
    @Snazzeo Год назад +1

    I wonder if the pitch clock + larger bases could open the door for the SB record to be broken

  • @jacocristoforo
    @jacocristoforo 2 года назад +3

    Love these videos! Keep them up!

  • @kylewashington1841
    @kylewashington1841 Год назад +2

    This is just a perfectly edited and vocally delivered video I've probably ever seen on RUclips. You definitely got a subscriber. Let's go Baseball 2023. Rockies for life.

  • @KidFresh71
    @KidFresh71 2 года назад +4

    The Manfred runner in extra innings is the stupidest thing ever. Pure back yard "ghost runner" shenanigans; should have no place in MLB. I refer to it as the Manfred Abomination.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад

      It inspired me to come up with a similar rule to prevent draws in championship chess tournaments. (The vast majority of chess games end in draws.) I proposed that one a draw is declared, each player received a new Queen and the game resumes. I figure that if baseball can do it, why not chess?

  • @pullt
    @pullt Год назад +1

    1. Complete Games, 749, Young
    2. Career Losses, 316, Young
    3. Steals of home, 54, Cobb
    4. All-star games, 25, Aaron

  • @billexusaf1542
    @billexusaf1542 2 года назад +4

    If you check the records at Cooperstown, you'll find that my ex brother- in- law holds the record for the youngest starting pitcher to start a major league baseball game. His name was Jim Derrington. He was 16 years old when he started several games for the Chicago White Sox in the mid 1950's. He signed a bonus contract out of South Gate high school in So Calif. In those days if you signed for a bonus, the parent club had to put you on the Major league team for the first month of your career, before being sent to the minors. The way things are done today, this record will never be broken.

    • @jimtruscott5670
      @jimtruscott5670 5 месяцев назад

      Joe Nuxhall Cincinnati Reds 1944 15 years 316 days old.

  • @bobbypierce7722
    @bobbypierce7722 Год назад +1

    2 Grand slams in 1 inning will never be broken.

  • @chettywap1620
    @chettywap1620 2 года назад +7

    For the stolen bases thing, I honestly believe there are people faster than Rickey in todays baseball, but they don’t have the acceleration that he had, he could go from 0% to 100% instantly and that’s something no one has ever seen befor

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад

      I'd say that the problem is because Blacks have abandoned baseball. Who were the stolen base leaders from the 1950s through the 1980? Overwhelmingly Black.

    • @somepeoplecanthandlethetruth
      @somepeoplecanthandlethetruth Год назад

      @@GeraldM_inNC well Rickey lead the league through the 2000s. So I guess your black statement needs to at least go until then. The game has changed entirely though. Wouldn't matter if it was nothing but Jamaicans base stealing is dead.

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад +1

      Micky Mantle was actually the fastest player in the game before his legs gave out. He could go from home to first in just under 3 seconds (2.9 secs per 90 feet). Ralph Garr is second on the list (3.06 per 90 feet).

    • @robertlosasso4222
      @robertlosasso4222 Год назад +1

      Mantle was faster than anyone going from home to first base .

  • @Palar47
    @Palar47 Год назад +1

    One record that seems breakable but I don't think ever will be broken is Hack Wilson's 191 RBIs in a season. The closest anyone has come in the last 90 years is Manny Ramirez in 1999 with 165, and he's #14 on the list. Everyone ahead of him was before 1938. It's probably a similar issue related to pitching; having to face fresh pitchers every few innings means fewer RBIs.

  • @vincentmaniscalco4421
    @vincentmaniscalco4421 2 года назад +3

    Wow I can’t believe u didn’t include Johnny Vandemeer he pitched 2 consecutive no hitters !! So to break the record a pitcher would have to pitch 3 no hitters in a row !! Trust it ain’t ever happening !!

    • @robertlosasso4222
      @robertlosasso4222 2 года назад

      Johnny Vander Meer .

    • @MrVegasdeuce
      @MrVegasdeuce 2 года назад +1

      Can you imagine a pitcher even throwing 3 complete games in a row let alone 3 no hitters

  • @JohnPepp
    @JohnPepp Год назад +1

    Considering the increased size of the bases and the rule limiting pitchers to only two throw overs before incurring a penalty that grants an extra base to the runner, it's quite possible that the record for stolen bases might be toppled.

  • @chrisallen2954
    @chrisallen2954 2 года назад +5

    Hank Aaron's record for total bases will never be broken.

    • @MrVegasdeuce
      @MrVegasdeuce 2 года назад +1

      👍

    • @mikec3949
      @mikec3949 2 года назад +1

      Pujols was 600+ short of the record. I think it can be done one day

    • @donstevenson3211
      @donstevenson3211 2 года назад +1

      The closest current player is Miguel Cabrera. In a twenty year career he comes up short of Aaron by 1606 bases. That's 27 miles. So yeah, it stands.

  • @michaelplowman8674
    @michaelplowman8674 Год назад +1

    I've always wanted to run a Coke style simulation with having a tandem of pitchers split starts and relief appearances with each guy trying to go 3 innings before giving over to the bullpen. The idea being that the batters would rarely see the pitcher more than once a game. If the guys go go on 2 days rest, they'd each get 27 starts and 27 relief appearances where they'd pitch the 4-6th innings.

    • @mfm4205
      @mfm4205 Год назад +1

      tony larussa actually tried it for a few weeks in 1991, but dropped it quickly when it didn't end up going too well (injuries played a part in him trying it).
      astros either did it or proposed doing it in their farm system around 2012-13 because gm at the time figured they had so many young arms, would be best way to get everyone work (don't think it lasted long if it happened, though).

  • @markbrowning4334
    @markbrowning4334 Год назад +4

    Randy Johnson came closer to Ryan's strikeout total than I thought. That's probably a reachable record, especially in a strikeout or homerun gun that baseball has devolved into.
    Ricky Henderson is safe as Vince Coleman retired a long time ago and no one else even considers stealing a base anymore.

    • @brandonneumann5294
      @brandonneumann5294 9 месяцев назад

      It’s not a reachable record because pitchers don’t throw as many innings as they used to.

    • @markbrowning4334
      @markbrowning4334 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@brandonneumann5294 Good point.
      Yes, that is a collective philosophy that I wish the game would ditch real soon.
      They think they are saving arms, but it seems like pitchers are getting injurned as much or more than they used to while being pulled from games earlier and earlier.
      I've heard that the full time work out regiments are overstraining these guy's physiologies.
      The old timers would regularly throw complete games and win 25 plus games a season, but they didn't have time to work out all year long as they had to get regular jobs in the off season to suppliment a frugal baseball salary.
      They just got in shape real quick in spring training and that was it.
      Also, I think the old timers played with heart and love for the game.
      Players today play for the payday and not much else.

  • @blah2blah65
    @blah2blah65 2 года назад +2

    When they allow cyborgs to play, you'll start to see some of these records fall.

    • @GeraldM_inNC
      @GeraldM_inNC Год назад +2

      Well, I hear they will start using robot umps call balls and strikes next year. If R2D2 breaks the glass ceiling against robots, maybe cyborgs are next.

  • @Fools_Requiem
    @Fools_Requiem 2 года назад +5

    Cal Ripkins's games started streak is never getting broken. TBH, Ripkin probably shouldn't even have the record in the first place. I think there was a point where he just went out there to keep the streak alive.

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад

      You are correct. His career batting average suffered because he would not rest himself. During the streak his average over a 100 game period was only .135. His dad was his manager and could of sat him down but didn't.

  • @harrypottsticker9353
    @harrypottsticker9353 Год назад +1

    Comerica also has ridiculous dimensions, huge 420 foot wall dead center, 342 down left, 365 down right, Detroit must have a thing for it lol

  • @chrisweidner4768
    @chrisweidner4768 2 года назад +4

    Rogers Hornsby, over a 5 year span, averaged over .400. 1 year hitting .424. Who knows. Now that the shift has ended. You never know….

  • @jamesgoss1860
    @jamesgoss1860 Год назад +2

    Stolen bases are harder to accomplish now because of replay. If the runner comes off the base by a centimeter while the fielder is holding the tag in super slo-mo, it's an out.

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 2 года назад +9

    Ichiro has the most hits of any professional baseball player in history, just not the most hits in MLB and I considered Ichiro's record in the environment he was in in Japan and America to be just as valid as anyone else over their entire career in just MLB.

    • @BaseballsNotDead
      @BaseballsNotDead  2 года назад +2

      Eh, minor leagues are still professional and if you add Rose's minor league numbers versus Ichiro's MLB+NPB is comes out ahead.

    • @Dudewheresmycar189
      @Dudewheresmycar189 Год назад +1

      @@BaseballsNotDead our minor leagues are also tougher than japans top league

    • @blu3collar949
      @blu3collar949 Год назад +1

      @@Dudewheresmycar189 That simpley is not true. Many minor league players are walk ons. They are not all drafted. Thus calling our minor leagues better players is laughable.

    • @Dudewheresmycar189
      @Dudewheresmycar189 Год назад +2

      @@blu3collar949 lol there’s a very strong reason why japans players don’t even try to come to our minors lol that’s BecuAse our farm system is much much better than japans top league. Very very very few of japans top players could even barely make it in our minor league system.

  • @csnide6702
    @csnide6702 Год назад +1

    Cy Young's 510 wins will never be even approached.

  • @ryangale3757
    @ryangale3757 2 года назад +5

    The problem with ever breaking a lot of these records is you don't just need an ideal league atmosphere to do so in that encourages maximizing that needed skillset, but also an especially special player to be the one to do it. You take any hitter from today's game, anyone, and drop them in Pete Rose's era, have them hit the same way as players did back then, and I'm willing to bet Rose would still beat them by plenty, because he was just THAT good of a hitter. Likewise with stolen bases; Rickey Henderson was just next level talented, well beyond the talent level of your typical stolen base leader, regardless of how much the league runs as a whole. Half of Nolan Ryan's success at getting strikeouts was because he was able to stay healthy and effective for MUCH longer than most starters can be. Unless another player comes along that is that same level of '1-in-a-million' talent, no amount of rule changing, general play style changes or whatever can help those records being broken, it's simply not possible.

  • @markfitzsimmons7544
    @markfitzsimmons7544 Год назад +1

    Good job breaking those down. It's crazy that Cy never won a Cy Young award! Or Lou Gherig being afflicted with that disease!

  • @zackaryhaselius2226
    @zackaryhaselius2226 2 года назад +4

    1,406 stolen bases over 20 years is 52 a season! My god!

  • @tyeikenberg8938
    @tyeikenberg8938 7 месяцев назад +1

    brooks Robinson's 16 consecutive gold gloves will never be broken. that is as safe as Cal's consecutive game streak and cy young's win total.

  • @redshoe1695
    @redshoe1695 2 года назад +2

    I would love to see another Rickey Henderson...

  • @bigcat618
    @bigcat618 Год назад +1

    How about 108 years without winning a World Series? Thank you, 2016 Cubs!

  • @ParamoreFAV3
    @ParamoreFAV3 Год назад +1

    Ichiro came into the MLB as a 30 year old rookie and still got 3000 hits; I absolutely believe he clears the hit record had he played over here his entire career.

    • @BaseballsNotDead
      @BaseballsNotDead  Год назад +2

      He was 27 his rookie year.

    • @ParamoreFAV3
      @ParamoreFAV3 Год назад +1

      @@BaseballsNotDead practically pushing 30 you know what I meant; but I still believe he comes close. Maybe in another lifetime they combine career total hits across all professional leagues.

  • @mrgonzale0978
    @mrgonzale0978 Год назад +1

    I always wanted to see the RBI's record broken. and the inside the park home run record.

  • @gamingworld8447
    @gamingworld8447 Год назад +1

    Another one is waino and yadi’s career battery starts with over 325, no ones loyal enough

  • @heemes
    @heemes Год назад +2

    What about DiMaggio's hitting streak (56 games)? Rose had 44, Brett had 30. I don't see anyone topping that.

    • @presleyrules
      @presleyrules Год назад +2

      The biggest reason that no one will top 56 games is the media. When a player reaches 15, he starts to draw a token mention. At the 20 game mark, he's on the media's radar. Then, at 30 games, the media descends on him like vultures. PRESTO! Pressure without end. I watched it with Brett and Rose. It's not fair but it's fact.

  • @henryquinonez3022
    @henryquinonez3022 2 года назад +2

    Great job! I loved the video!