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Stan Musial Strikes Out Three Times!

A young Stan Musial, 3026 games without ejection

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Stan Musial Strikes Out Three Times!

What’s so unusual about that? Read on to find out…

“Hitting is like swimming…Once you learn the stroke you never forget it.” -Stan Musial

I love writing and reading about Stan Musial’s career. When you see his stats all put together, as I’ve done in this essay, you realize he’s was one of the game’s greatest players and truly one of the most underrated players in major league history. I feel very fortunate I was able to see him play. And here’s something about his career to really think about. It should wake up anyone who doesn’t think the game has changed drastically over the years…

Fifty-eight years ago this week, on July 28, 1963, Cubs’ lefty Dick Ellsworth struck out Stan Musial three times in the Cubs’ 5-1 victory over the Cardinals in a game played at Wrigley Field.

Why am I mentioning this, you ask?

Because over Stan’s 22-year career, a span of 3,026 major league games, this is the only time Stan struck out three times in a game! And this was in his last season, a couple of months before he retired. Until this game, he had never struck out three times in one game. I know this is hard to believe, especially the way guys strikeout today, but apparently, it’s true.

And there’s more: Over his career, Stan struck out just 696 times. The most he ever struck out in a single year was 46 times, and that was in 1962, the second-to-last year of his career. His best year for strikeouts was 1943, when he struck out just 18 times in 701 plate appearances, a rate of once every 38.8 appearances!

There’s a lot of ways to put Stan’s performance into proper perspective. In his 12, 721 career plate appearances, 696 strikeouts is one strikeout every 18.27 trips to the plate; over a 22-year career, that’s an average of just 31 per year. Don’t forget Stan hit 475 home runs over his career (with a year lost to military service in his prime), so he’d have to be considered a slugger. How many of today’s sluggers could match a performance like that? Usually today they’re in the 150-200 range.

The Great Career of Stan Musial

Stan Musial played 22 seasons for the Cardinals, from 1941 to 1945 and from 1946–63. He’s universally regarded as one of the most consistent hitters in baseball history. Stan batted .331 over his career and set National League records for career hits (3,630); RBIs (1,951); games played (3,026); at-bats

Stan Musial later in life

(10,972); runs scored (1,949); doubles (725), total bases (6,134), and extra-base hits (1,277) most of which were later broken by Pete Rose. He’s still in the top-10 all-time in all of these categories. At the time of his retirement, his 475 career home runs ranked second in National League history behind only Mel Ott’s total of 511. Had his career not be interrupted by military service in 1945, he almost certainly would have been a member of the 500 Home Run club.

A seven-time National League batting champion, and two-time National League RBI champion, his 6,134 total bases remained a major league record until surpassed by Hank Aaron. He also compiled 177 triples, .417 OBP, and .599 slugging average.

Perhaps the most telling statistic of all is his career 159 OPS+ mark, placing him well above his contemporaries (100 being the major league average). Stan had identical totals of 1,815 hits at home and on the road. He won three National League MVP awards, and led the Cardinals to four pennants and three World Series championships (1942, ’44, and ’46). He shares the major league record for the most All-Star Games played (24) with Hank Aaron and Willie Mays.

With the way the game has changed over the years, we may never see his like again. And so, as we have so many times in the past, today we gladly shine our baseball spotlight on one of the greatest players in baseball history, who happened to be an even greater man, the Cardinals’ Stan “The Man” Musial!

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Statistics from Baseball-Reference.com

 

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