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Showing results for tags '7-Time NL Batting Champion'.
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Rogers Hornsby's career batting average of .358 is second only to Ty Cobb's (.367). During the decade of the 1920s, Hornsby hit .317 once, which was the only time he hit lower than .361. Look at this decade of hitting: 1920 - .370 1921 - .397 1922 - .401 1923 - .384 1924 - .424 --> The highest single-season batting average in post-1900 MLB history 1925 - .403 --> The 4th RBI Crown he won in the 1920s 1926 - .317 1927 - .361 1928 - .387 1929 - .380 --> The 7th time he hit over 40 home runs in the 1920s, leading the NL 4 times, and the 9th time he led the league in .OPS percentage
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- Texas
- Winters
- 1896
- Rogers Hornsby
- Baseball
- MLB
- Saint Louis Cardinals
- Chicago Cubs
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- World Series Champion 1926
- 2-Time NL MVP
- 2-Time NL Triple Crown Winner
- 7-Time NL Batting Champion
- 2-Time NL Home Run Leader
- 4-Time NL RBI Leader
- MLB All-Century Team
- MLB All-Time Team
- .358 Career Batting Average
- MLB Hall of Fame 1942
- Illionois
- Chicago
- 1963
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ESPN SportsCentury Documentary on Stan "The Man" Musial - the legendary hitter from "way out west" in St. Louis - perennially underrated due to his distal locale, but beloved by connoisseurs of the game as one of the all-time greats. Stan Musial: superstar, role model. In case anyone notices the discrepancy between the duration of Musial's Career (22 years) and that he's a 24-time All-Star, it's because from 1959-1962, MLB played two All-Star Games a year. "Stan Musial is geographically challenged - had he played his career in New York, we would have called him Lou Gehrig." -- John Thorn