It’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye. (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.
This one takes us back a bit. On June 7, 1922, As his Pirates lost to the Giants 9-8 in 18 innings (in Pittsburgh), Pittsburgh CF Max Carey had a record-setting day at the plate. Carey came to the plate nine times and collected three hits and six walks. He remains the only player to reach safely in every plate appearance nine times in a single contest. Side note: Cubs’ 3B Stan Hack once reached base nine times in a game (another 18-inning affair), but he had ten plate appearances (one sacrifice bunt). The usual disclaimer: Negro League single-game statistics from 1920-48 have not been fully incorporate into MLB records.
In his record-setting game, Carey scored three runs, drove in two and had one double and three stolen bases.
Well, as usual, with The Roundtable, one thing led to another. First, I was drawn to another unicorn day: May 8, 2016, when Nationals’ RF Bryce Harper reached base seven times in seven plate appearances in a 13-inning Nationals’ 4-3 loss to the Cubs – without getting a single official at bat – a “feat” yet to be duplicated. Harper:
- Walked on four pitches in the first inning, with one on and one out;
- Walked on five pitches in the third, with one out and no one on;
- Was intentionally walked in the fourth, with runners on second and third and two out;
- Was hit by a pitch, with one on and one out in the sixth;
- Walked on five pitches in the eighth, with one out and no one on base;
- Was intentionally walked in the tenth, with runners on second and third and two out;
- Was intentionally walked in the twelfth wit, runners on second and third and wo out.
With the “wave ‘em to first” intentional walk rule not yet in effect (it took effect the following season), Harper “saw” a total of 27 pitches (assuming he saw the one that hit him) of which only two were (called) strikes. He, in fact, never swung the bat in his seven trips to the plate.
Again, as usual, that was not enough for The Roundtable. I got to thinking back about Max Carey getting on base nine times in nine plates appearance in that 1922 extra-inning game and set out to find the record for getting on base in every plate appearance in a nine-inning (or less) contest.
As you look at the chart, you may notice:
- Rennie Stennett’s “seven times up – seven times on” game saw him collect seven base hits, still the MLB record for hits in a nine-inning game;
- Harry Craft hit for the cycle in his “lucky number seven” day and it was never in doubt. He doubled in the second, tripled in the third, singled in the fourth and completed the cycle with a homer in the fifth;
- Sean Casey hit two homers when he rolled his lucky seven;
- Mel Ott‘s “Highway to Seven” included five walks and only two hits., as did Ben Chapman‘s.
Primary Resource: Stathead.com
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