images/slider_image_01.jpg

NEW YORK METS MANIA

Top Banner Ads

Monday, 19 May 2025 19:08

Pete Rose is NOT the best hitter in MLB history...enough!

Written by
Rate this item
(0 votes)

Let’s make one thing clear…Pete Rose was NOT the “best hitter in the game.” Not even close. I don't understand how fans can even view him as such.

The one thing that is true is that Pete Rose accumulated the most base hits (4,256) while playing in the Major Leagues.

And here are some other things that are true that will contribute to that one truth that has everyone believing something that is NOT true – Pete Rose also played in more games than any other player in Major League history (3,562), had more plate appearances than any other player in Major League history (15,890), and had more at bats than any other player in Major League history (14,053).

Pete Rose with those 4,256 base hits ONLY hit for an average of .303.

Ty Cobb finished with a career batting average of .366, Rogers Hornsby had a career average of .358, and Joe Jackson, yes, Shoeless Joe Jackson, finished at .356. They are 1-2-3 in career batting averages. Where is Pete Rose? Pete Rose is not in the Top 10. He’s not in the Top 20. He’s not even in the Top 50! Pete Rose ranks 138th of all-time.

What makes someone the best hitter, the best all-around hitter, in MLB history? Just because someone has the most base hits doesn’t make them the best HITTER.  Nolan Ryan accumulated 5,714 strikeouts but does that make HIM the best PITCHER in MLB history? I think there are a lot of pitchers who would be considered better pitchers than Ryan, just like there are a lot of players who should definitely be considered better hitters than Pete Rose.

In addition to Cobb, Hornsby, and Jackson, a lot of historians would tell you that Tris Speaker was one of the best hitters ever. But there is usually no doubt that THE best hitter of all-time, with all due respect to players like Lou Gehrig, Willie Mays, Henry Aaron, and Ted Williams HAS to be Babe Ruth.

Ruth, along with hitting those 714 home runs, had a lifetime batting average of .342 and OBP of .474. He accumulated 2,873 hits in just 8,399 at bats. He also had 506 doubles and 136 triples. Rose had 746 doubles, 135 triples, and 160 home runs in nearly 7,500 more at bats.

In what world does Pete Rose’s total of 4,256 base hits make him the “best all-around hitter in MLB history?”

Regardless of the thought process as to whether or not Pete Rose deserved to be reinstated by Major League Baseball, and regardless whether Pete Rose should be considered by the committee and be eligible to be elected to the Hall of Fame, Pete Rose is NOT the best hitter in the history of Major League Baseball.

Read 1278 times Last modified on Monday, 19 May 2025 19:19
Login to post comments

 

FOLLOW US
Facebook
 

 

Archives

September is the stretch drive in Major League Baseball and in an era where more teams make the post season than ever before, it makes it pretty ...
[READ MORE]
The New York Mets have hit the skids and there’s no hints that it will end anytime soon. They had a seven game winning streak. But then, they went ...
[READ MORE]
In 2018 Matt Harvey was asked to go to the Minor Leagues and get himself right. He refused. He was stubborn. He thought he was too much a star to be ...
[READ MORE]
This year’s trade deadline was not as glamorous and spectacular as it was 10 years ago for the New York Mets. Of course, we had the drama of the ...
[READ MORE]
So now that Francisco Lindor has officially been named the next captain of the New York Mets by Yahoo!, we can also bid adieu to Pete Alonso at the ...
[READ MORE]
The New York Mets were always known for the ability to produce great pitchers. I think that while it is somewhat true, it’s really a bit overblown. ...
[READ MORE]
While the New York Yankees fans always had a disdain for teams that were bitter rivals of the Bronx Bombers, a la the Boston Red Sox for a very long ...
[READ MORE]
OK so maybe it’s time for the New York Mets to call on all the young kids and put them in the lineup every game and see where they take us. Because ...
[READ MORE]
Geez…if you got a pay day of $765 million then the least you could do is make the All Star team, no? You would figure that if someone is commanding ...
[READ MORE]
The New York Mets will end the month of June with a record of 48-37, in second place in the National League’s Eastern Division, right on the heels ...
[READ MORE]
Prev Next

New York Mets Logo

About New York Mets Mania

Alan Karmin is an award-winning journalist and author. He was born in Brooklyn, New York and spent most of his life growing up in the New Jersey suburbs. Alan's family were avid Brooklyn Dodgers fans and when the Dodgers moved west, the Mets became the team to root for. The Mets have always been a true focal point, Alan even wrote a term paper in high school to analyze what was wrong with the Mets. While at the University of Miami, Alan honed his craft covering the, gulp, Yankees during spring trainings in Fort Lauderdale for a local NBC affiliate, as well as the Associated Press and UPI. He broadcasted baseball games for the University of Miami, and spring training games for the Baltimore Orioles and Montreal Expos. New York Mets Mania is a forum for Alan to write about his favorite team and for baseball fans to chime in and provide their thoughts and ideas about New York's Amazin' Mets.