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Miguel Cabrera Triple Crown Watch

Not to suggest it's been a while since anybody won a Triple Crown, but the last time it happened (1967) a gallon of gas cost 33 cents ? the average salary of a big league baseball player was $10,000 ? and the Internet was so slow, it was almost like it didn't even exist. Heh-heh. Almost.

But now along comes Miguel Cabrera to threaten to force people to learn how to spell Yastrzemski again. And that's a beautiful thing. But as this edition of the September History Watch is about to report, there's all kinds of history out there for Cabrera to make, even if he doesn't win the Triple Crown:

First off, let's give you a clear picture of how special this is, to find a man making this serious run at the Triple Crown with a mere two weeks left in the season.

Cabera leads the league in batting average. And leads the league in RBIs. And is second in his league in home runs (40), just two back of Josh Hamilton. Well, friends, that's more astonishing than you might think.

This is Year 45 A.Y. (After Yastrzemski). And according to the Elias Sports Bureau, this is the first time in any of those seasons that any player has reached the final two weeks of the season, and was leading his league in batting and RBIs, and within two of the lead in homers.

Think of all the great hitters who have roamed the baseball earth in all those years: George Brett, Johnny Bench, Albert Pujols, Barry Bonds, Mike Schmidt,. Kenneth Griffey Jr. and many more. None of them ever made this kind of run at a Triple Crown. But now Miguel Cabrera has. So he's already on historic turf.

? And now another tidbit that astounded us September History Watchers. Suppose Cabrera wins two-thirds of the Triple Crown but winds up second in home runs. That would seem like a disappointment, but maybe not after you hear this:

Would you believe that we're closing in on nearly a half-century since anyone won a Triple Crown, and nobody has had a season since in which he won two legs of this trifecta and finished second in the third category? That word, again, was "nobody." In fact, we've only had two third-place finishes by players who led in the other two:

Jim Rice 1978 (led in HRs and RBIs, third in batting race)
Matt Kemp 2011 (led in HRs and RBIs, third in batting race)

? And now another incredible feat on Cabrera's plate: He leads the league in batting and RBIs. Plus, he has already hit 40 homers. Would you believe that, in the history of baseball, only two men have ever done that without winning a Triple Crown? Here they are:

Jimmie Foxx 1938 (hit 50 HRs, eight behind Hank Greenberg)
Todd Helton 2000 (hit 42 HRs, eight behind Sammy Sosa)


? Speaking of Foxx, he's had his own unique Double Crown all to himself for more than 70 years, only to find himself in danger of having Cabrera crash his party. Amazingly, in the live ball era, Foxx is the only man ever to lead the American League in batting and RBIs but not win a Triple Crown. So even if Cabrera can't catch Hamilton in the home run race, if he leads the league in the other two categories, he'll still have done something cool and historic.

? Over in the NL, for some reason, that particular Double Crown (batting and RBI titles) hasn't been quite as rare. But it's still been done just six times in the past 85 years:

Stan Musial 1948
Tommy Davis 1962
Joe Torre 1971
Al Oliver 1982
Helton 2000
Matt Holliday 2007

Of that group, only one man had a real shot at a Triple Crown in the last two weeks of the season. And that was the great Stan Musial, in 1948.

Ralph Kiner and Johnny Mize tied for the league lead in homers that year, with 40. Musial was sitting on 38 home runs with nine games left in the season but hit only one more and finished one behind them.

? Hold on. It gets better. Other than Musial, only one other player in the live ball era managed to lead his league in batting and RBIs and wind up as close to the league lead in home runs as Cabrera is now (two or closer). This man:

The immortal Rogers Hornsby in 1921 -- hit 21 homers and finished second in the league, two behind the eloquently nicknamed George (High Pockets) Kelly.

? Triple Crowns aside, Cabrera has a shot at a few other feats that got the September History Watch's attention. For one thing, he's on the verge of becoming a back-to-back batting champ.

The only other active player who can make that claim: Joe Mauer (2008-09).

The only other Tiger who has ever done that: Some dude named Ty Cobb, whoever he is (did it eight times).

? Back-to-back or not, just being a two-time batting champ is a rarity here in the post-Gwynn-and-Boggs era. The only two active players who have won a batting title more than once at any point: Mauer and Ichiro Suzuki (2001, 2004).


? Finally, even if Cabrera doesn't win the Triple Crown, he's already one of only three active players who have led their league in all three Triple Crown categories at some point in their careers -- just not in the same year. The others:

Albert Pujols (batting title '03, HR title '09-10, RBI title '10)
Alex Rodriguez (batting title '96, HR title '01-03, '05, '07, RBI title '02, '07)

By the way, if Josh Hamilton leads the league in homers, he'd also join this list. But enough about him. This is supposed to be a Miguel Cabrera edition of the September History Watch. And as you've noticed, there's more than enough historic stuff on his agenda to keep us History Watchers busy without dragging anyone else into this opus.
 
Jimmie Foxx won a triple crown in 1933 with a .356 48 163 line with the Philadelphia Athletics (an AL team). Oddly enough, he choked to death the year the last triple crown was hit, 1967, at the age of 59.
 
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Looks like Cabby is going to run away with the AL batting crown unless something major happens. In the last two months (186 ABs) Trout is only hitting .274. He now trails Cabrera by .009 and may not even finish in the top three in hitting by years end with Jeter and Mauer only trailing him by .001 and .003 respectively.
 
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Looks like Cabby is going to run away with the AL batting crown unless something major happens. In the last two months (186 ABs) Trout is only hitting .274. He now trails Cabrera by .009 and may not even finish in the top three in hitting by years end with Jeter and Mauer only trailing him by .001 and .003 respectively.

It wouldn't take something major. If Miggy goes 2-12 this weekend and trout goes 6-12 they would only be .001 apart. I don't think that will happen but I wouldn't consider that "major"
 
Trout has slowly been getting his .ave lower and lower, Jeter could over take him for 2nd soon.
 
Updated 9/21/12

Not much to report. Miggy didn't play, obviously. Trout went 2 for 3 with a walk. Meth-breath wasn't in the Rangers' lineup today for whatever reason...didn't really research it.

No change at all in the HR category.
 
Updated 9/21/12

Not much to report. Miggy didn't play, obviously. Trout went 2 for 3 with a walk. Meth-breath wasn't in the Rangers' lineup today for whatever reason...didn't really research it.

No change at all in the HR category.

http://www.mlive.com/tigers/index.ssf/2012/09/al_home_run_leader_josh_hamilt.html
AL home run leader Josh Hamilton to miss series as Detroit Tigers' Miguel Cabrera chases Triple Crown.
from Mlive

sinus infection causing vision problem.
 
From Josh Hamilton:

Here's what Hamilton told the Dallas Morning News about Cabrera:

"Maybe I'm sick for a reason. Maybe it's his time. I don't really care about holding on to the home-run lead.

"(Cabrera) is a good dude, and he's played consistently well for a long time."

Hamilton then addressed Cabrera's bid to become the first Triple Crown winner in 45 years, since Boston's Carl Yastrzemski in 1967.

"It would be cool if there was another winner," Hamilton said. "There's nobody I'd rather see win it than him."
 
So Miggy gets the HR part of the triple crown because Hamilton wants him to have it? :bs:
 
From Josh Hamilton:

Here's what Hamilton told the Dallas Morning News about Cabrera:

"Maybe I'm sick for a reason. Maybe it's his time. I don't really care about holding on to the home-run lead.

"(Cabrera) is a good dude, and he's played consistently well for a long time."

Hamilton then addressed Cabrera's bid to become the first Triple Crown winner in 45 years, since Boston's Carl Yastrzemski in 1967.

"It would be cool if there was another winner," Hamilton said. "There's nobody I'd rather see win it than him."


I read that. Cabrera is a very well liked and respected player in the league. He has fun out there, and even in close games he's out there chatting up the opposing players. Classy words from Hamilton. I think the players have realized how remarkable of a hitter Cabby is before the national media has. In the last 9 years no one has driven in more runs including Pujols, but the media has just recently started calling him one of the best few hitters in the game in recent years.
 
I was at the game Saturday n got to see #42...place was pretty pumped for it.
 
Pretty sure that's not at all what he said.

Always disagreeing, eh.

"Maybe I'm sick for a reason. Maybe it's his time. I don't really care about holding on to the home-run lead." -- that's basically exactly what he said.

I'm sick for a reason, maybe It's his time and I don't really care? Who does that?

And it wasn't classy what Hamilton said. That's not giving respect.
 
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