<\/a>Albert Pujols should move up the HR and RBI lists in 2015.<\/p><\/div>\n
Alex Rodrigue<\/strong>z<\/span> is also on the home run milestone list \u2013 not for a new round number, but for his place on the list. Rodriguez is currently fifth among all-time home run hitters at 654 roundtrippers.\u00a0 He needs just seven homers to pass Willie Mays for the number-four spot.\u00a0 Beyond Mays, there are the out-of-reach Babe Ruth (714), Hank Aaron (755) and Barry Bonds (762).<\/p>\nThe Red Sox\u2019 David Ortiz<\/span><\/strong> is 34 home runs shy of becoming the 27th<\/sup> member of the 500 home run club.\u00a0 While Ortiz did hit 35 dingers last season, it was the first time he reached at least 34 home runs since 2007. If he makes 500 this season, it will be late in the year. He\u2019ll probably need to suit up for at least one more season to reach the half-century mark.<\/p>\nAlbert Pujols<\/strong><\/span> starts 2015 with 520 home runs, good for 21st<\/sup> all-time.\u00a0 He should vault up several spots this season (Willie McCovey, Frank Thomas and Ted Williams, for example, all sit at 521). If Pujols matches his 29 home runs of 2014, he will move into a tie for 15th<\/sup> place with Mike Schmidt.\u00a0 (Pujols needs only 16 HRs to tie Mickey Mantle for 16th<\/sup> place all time.)<\/p>\nTotal Bases<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nAlex Rodriguez<\/strong> <\/span>is just 20 total bases shy of becoming the ninth player to reach 5,500 total bases – and 59 shy of tying Carl Yastrzemski for number-eight all-time. (Number seven is a ways off – Pete Rose at 5,752). Only three players have reached 6,000 total bases in their careers: Hank Aaron (6,856), Stan Musial (6,134) and Willie Mays (6,066).<\/p>\nStolen Bases<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nAnother Yankee, Ichiro Suzuki<\/strong><\/span>, needs just 13 stolen bases to become the 24th<\/sup> player to reach the 500 mark. He is, however, 41-years-old, so 14 steals is not a given. Still, he\u2019s never stolen less than 14 in a season (15 steals in 2014), so he has a chance to reach the 500 mark late in 2015.<\/p>\nThe Dodgers\u2019 Carl Crawford<\/strong> <\/span>is also closing in on 500 steals \u2013 with 470 going into the season. Crawford, however, hasn\u2019t reached the 30-steal mark since 2010 (23 last season).\u00a0 With the Dodgers still facing log jam in the outfield, Crawford (like Suzuki) is a long-shot to hit this milestone in 2014 . (If I had to pick either Ichiro or Crawford to reach 500 this year, I’d go with Suzuki.)<\/p>\nStrikeouts<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nThe Yankees\u2019 C.C. Sabathia<\/strong><\/span> needs just 63 strikeouts to become the 31st<\/sup> hurler to reach the 2,500 mark for his career. If he comes back from last season\u2019s knee surgery, the 34-year-old southpaw should easily reach that mark. Sabathia currently stands at number 38 on the all-time K list (2,437) \u2013 between him and number 31 are Jamie Moyer (2,441), Andy Pettitte (2,448), San McDowell (2,453), Jim Kaat (2,461), Mark Langston (2,464), Jack Morris (2,478) and Don Drysdale (2,486). If Sabathia can notch 65 whiffs in 2015, he can move into a tie with Christy Mathewson for 30th<\/sup> all time (2,502).<\/p>\nVictories<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nMark Buehrle<\/strong><\/span>\u2019s first win for the Blue Jays<\/strong><\/span> in 2015 will be his 200th<\/sup> career win,<\/p>\nGames Pitched<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nThe Rockies’ LaTroy Hawkins<\/strong><\/span> (who appeared in his 1,000th game last season), now stands at number 16 for pitching appearances all-time. \u00a0The 42-year-old Hawkins, \u00a0who made 57 appearances last season, needs to take the mound in 35 games to tie Trevor Hoffman for tenth all-time. BBRT is betting that Hawkins – who has announced he will retire after the 2015 season (his 21st MLB season) – will make that top ten mark.<\/p>\nSaves<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n <\/a>Joe Nathan could take a high five for his 400th saves this coming season.<\/p><\/div>\n
The Tigers\u2019 Joe Nathan<\/strong> <\/span>\u2013 coming off a disappointing 2014 \u2013 needs just 24 saves to become just the sixth pitcher to reach the 400 mark. Even with his 4.81 ERA of 2014, Nathan notched 35 saves. If the 39-year-old has enough left in the tank to hold onto the closer\u2019s position, he should make it.\u00a0 The chances, from here, look to be 50-50<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"In this post, BBRT would like to take a look at some statistical milestones that may be reached during the 2015 season.\u00a0 As we do that, it\u2019s no surprise that the player most likely to make a \u201cmark\u201d or two in 2015 is the Yankees’ Alex Rodriguez \u2013 who has a shot at some significant […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[11,9],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n