User:Staxringold/TripleCrown

Major League Baseball Triple Crown

 * ... that Grover Cleveland Alexander (pictured) is the only pitcher in Major League Baseball history to win Triple Crowns with multiple teams?

5x expanded by Staxringold (talk), Killervogel5 (talk). Self nom at 14:09, 11 June 2010 (UTC)



Lead proposal
In Major League Baseball, a player earns the Triple Crown when he leads a league in three specific statistical categories. For batters, a player must lead the league in home runs, runs batted in (RBI), and batting average; pitchers must lead the league in wins, strikeouts, and earned run average (ERA). Generally, the Triple Crown refers to leading a specific league such as the National League (NL) or the American League (AL) in these categories. However, if a player leads all of Major League Baseball in all three categories, he is said to have captured a "Major League Triple Crown".

The most batting Triple Crowns won by a player is two. Rogers Hornsby was the first to reach this total, winning his first in 1922 and then leading all major leagues in 1925 en route to his second Triple Crown, both with the St. Louis Cardinals. Ted Williams later matched this mark in the AL, winning in 1942 and 1947 with the Boston Red Sox. The Cardinals have won the most batting Triple Crowns as a franchise with four. Along with Hornsby's two, Tip O'Neill won in the now-defunct American Association in 1887 while the team was known as the St. Louis Browns, and Joe Medwick added the Cardinals' fourth in 1937. Twelve of the fourteen players who have offensive Triple Crowns have been elected to the Hall of Fame. Carl Yastrzemski's Triple Crown in 1967 is the most recent. Tim Kurkjian believes the Triple Crown has become more difficult to win with the advent of more hitters who choose to specialize in either hitting for batting average or power.

The most pitching Triple Crowns captured by one player is three, accomplished by three players. Grover Cleveland Alexander was the first to win his third; he captured the first two in consecutive seasons with the Philadelphia Phillies (1915–1916) and the final one in 1920 with the Chicago Cubs. Alexander is the only pitching Triple Crown winner to win his titles with more than one team. Walter Johnson won his three Triple Crowns with the first Washington Senators, leading the league in all three categories in 1913, 1918, and 1924. Sandy Koufax was the most recent to capture three Triple Crowns, winning his three within four seasons for the Los Angeles Dodgers (1963, 1965–1966); all of Koufax' wins were Major League crowns, the most for any player. Other pitchers who have won multiple Triple Crowns include Christy Mathewson (1905 and 1908 New York Giants), Lefty Grove (1930 and 1931 Philadelphia Athletics), Lefty Gomez (1934 and 1937 New York Yankees), and Roger Clemens (1997 and 1998 Toronto Blue Jays). One pitcher, Guy Hecker, won a Triple Crown in a major league that is currently defunct; he led the American Association in wins, strikeouts, and ERA in 1884 while pitching for the Louisville Colonels. Seventeen of nineteen eligible pitchers who have won a Triple Crown have been elected to the Hall of Fame. Players are eligible for the Hall of Fame if they have "been retired five seasons", disqualifying six pitchers who have been active during that time. The most recent winner is Jake Peavy.

The first Triple Crown winner was Tommy Bond, who won the NL pitching crown in 1877. The next year, Paul Hines won the first batting Triple Crown in the NL; he is the only batting Triple Crown winner from the NL or the AL who is not in the Hall of Fame. The highest home run and RBI totals by a batting winner were achieved by Mickey Mantle and Lou Gehrig, respectively; Mantle hit 52 home runs in 1956, and Gehrig batted in 165 runs in 1934, their only Triple Crown seasons. In the National League, Hornsby is the leader in home runs, with 42, and Medwick's 154 RBI lead as well. Hugh Duffy's .440 average in 1894 is the highest ever during a winning season, and the AL leader is Nap Lajoie (.426). Among pitchers, the lowest ERAs belong to Johnson (1.14 in the 1913 AL) and Alexander (1.22 in the 1915 NL). Johnson is also the AL leader in wins (36), but Charles Radbourn's NL total is over 20 wins higher; his 59 wins in 1884 are a Major League Baseball single-season record. Radbourn also struck out 441 batters that season, the highest total for a Triple Crown winner; Pedro Martínez struck out 313 in the 1999 season to notch the highest strikeout total for an AL winner.