DiMaggio and the 56-Game Hitting Streak

1941: Joe DiMaggio signing autographs during his famous 56-game hitting streak.

1941: Joe DiMaggio signing autographs during his famous 56-game hitting streak.

Joe Wilhoit 69 Games 1919

Joe Wilhoit
69 Minors Games
1919

The consecutive games hitting streak records for all of baseball are less famous than they really should be. We already know that Joe DiMaggio, the holder of the famous 56-game MLB mark from 1941, also did even better with San Francisco of the Pacific Coast League in 1933 when he hit safely in an amazing 63 straight games, but that wasn’t even the record. A fellow named Joe Wilhoit hit safely in 69 games for Wichita of the Western League in 1919. And get this – original Houston Colt .45 outfielder Roman Mejias hit safely in 55 straight games for Waco in the 1954 Big State League season.

Then there’s the quite famous Joe DiMaggio major league mark of 56 games – the one that many feel will never be broken by the way the game is played today. – What made Joe D. so special that his most famous record wasn’t even as great as the one he set eight years earlier at the minor league level? All I can offer is my humble opinion on what makes for a good streak hitter. I’m not sure that anyone can explain why the MLB record is now seen as unbreakable beyond the fact that the game has changed and that a streaking hitter today would probably be stopped by design before he got there.

Joe DiMaggio had an incredible batting eye – and that statement is right in there with the note that the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. Everyone on this list of MLB 30 consecutive game hitting streaks has or had a great batting eye. Although their batting styles vary greatly in many instances, none are pure mashers who either strike out, or else, blast the ball into space. A few had great power, but most did not. They all had incredible batting eyes, at least, for the seasons of their streaks.

Roman Mejias 55 Minors Games 1954

Roman Mejias
55 Minors Games
1954

What they each shared was the ability to see pitches earlier and for longer periods of time. It was enough of an edge to have a better idea about what was coming and where it was landing – and whether or not it was hittable. My guess too is that they mostly shared an ability to adjust their bat movement and to – hit the pitch where it came in – and to “hit it to where they ain’t” on the defensive side.

It isn’t too hard to see why a great “seeing” hitter like Ted Williams never made this list. He didn’t adjust. If a pitched ball was two inches out of the strike zone, but still hittable, he didn’t swing – and he characteristically pulled everything to right. Lou Boudreau’s “Ted Williams Shift” to right was nothing less than a tribute to Teddy Ballgame’s intransigence on this matter of ego. Right field was his, or so he thought. He wouldn’t tap the ball to left, even if the other team gave him the whole territory on a fielders-free basis. I’m not sure how often Ted actually took advantage of the shift, but it certainly wasn’t often enough to constitute a successful adjustment.

Joe DiMaggio, on the other hand, was a tenacious opportunist when the other team gave him an intentional or accidental advantage of open field. He also found a way on fourth trip hitless game times a bat to find a pitch intended as a virtual ball four pass and lace it down the line for a streak-saving double. In fact, as you may recall, when Indians third baseman Ken Keltner stopped a ball racing down the line near third and turned it into a ground out end to “the streak” at 56 games, that was pretty much what DiMaggio was hoping to achieve one more time.

To sum it up, it takes good seeing eye qualities on pitched balls, an ability to adjust one’s hitting style, plenty of courage, and a whole lot of blind luck of one type or another to put together a really long hitting streak. As for stopping a hitting streak by design, a really good pitcher can stop you anytime he chooses to throw you truly unhittable pitches – or simply give you an intentional pass or hit you with a duster each time you come to bat. Fortunately, game integrity and the pitcher’s ego work against a supremely obvious attempt to stop any streak by pitching totally away from a batter – but I’m betting some club today would be willing to try it.

Willie Taveras 30 MLB Games 2006

Willie Taveras
30 MLB Games
2006

Some streaks are freaky. They build upon a player having certain abilities like speed that other teams don’t recognize in time to stop an individual’s run up the players’ record mast. With a little ability, the speed to run out normal ground ball outs, and the luck that spawns from a surprised defense, a guy like former Astro Willie Taveras made the list. In 2006, Taveras ran his shock-streak all the way to 30 games before he was finally stopped. It was enough surprise-time to leave Willie Taveras tied with a gazillion others, including the great Stan Musial, at 35th place.

Thanks again to the beautiful presentation work they do at Baseball Almanac, here’s how the 30 consecutive games list for MLB hitting streaks through the late part of the 2013 season looks this morning:

Major League Hitting Streaks (Prepared by Baseball Almanac)

Players With At Least 1 Hit in At Least 30 Consecutive Games

Rank Year Name Team League Games

1.

1941

Joe DiMaggio (AL Record)

New York

AL 56

2.

1896-1897

Willie Keeler (NL Record)

Baltimore

NL 45

3.

1978

Pete Rose

Cincinnati

NL 44

4.

1894

Bill Dahlen

Chicago

NL 42

5.

1922

George Sisler

St. Louis

AL 41

6.

1911

Ty Cobb

Detroit

AL 40

7.

1987

Paul Molitor

Milwaukee

AL 39

8.

2005-2006

Jimmy Rollins

Philadelphia NL 38

9.

1945

Tommy Holmes

Boston

NL 37
10. 1896-1897 Gene DeMontreville Washington NL 36

11.

1895

Fred Clarke

Louisville

NL 35

 

1917

Ty Cobb

Detroit

AL 35
1924-1925 George Sisler St. Louis AL 35

 

2002

Luis Castillo

Florida

NL 35
2006 Chase Utley Philadelphia NL 35

 16.

1938

George McQuinn

St. Louis

AL 34

 

1949

Dom DiMaggio

Boston

AL 34

 

1987

Benito Santiago

San Diego

NL 34

19.

1893

George Davis

New York

NL 33

 

1907

Hal Chase

New York

AL 33

 

1922

Rogers Hornsby

St. Louis

NL 33
1933 Heinie Manush Washington AL 33

 

2011

Dan Uggla

Atlanta

NL 33
23. 1922-1923 Harry Heilmann Detroit AL 32
1996-1997 Hal Morris Cincinnati NL 32
25. 1885-1886 Jimmy Wolf Louisville AA 31
1899

Ed Delahanty

Philadelphia

NL 31

 

1906

Nap Lajoie

Cleveland

AL 31

 

1924

Sam Rice

Washington

AL 31
1965-1966 Vada Pinson Cincinnati NL 31

 

1969

Willie Davis

Los Angeles

NL 31

 

1970

Rico Carty

Atlanta

NL 31
1975-1976 Ron LeFlore Detroit AL 31

 

1980

Ken Landreaux

Minnesota

AL 31
1999 Vladimir Guerrero Montreal NL 31

35.

1876

Cal McVey

Chicago

NL 30
1895-1896 Dusty Miller

Cincinnati

NL 30

 

1898

Elmer Smith

Cincinnati

NL 30

 

1912

Tris Speaker

Boston

AL 30
1922-1923 Charlie Grimm Chicago NL 30
1927-1928 Lance Richbourg Boston NL 30
1929-1930 Sam Rice Washington AL 30

 

1934

Goose Goslin

Detroit

AL 30

 

1950

Stan Musial

St. Louis

NL 30

 

1980

George Brett

Kansas City

AL 30

 

1989

Jerome Walton

Chicago

NL 30

 

1997

Sandy Alomar, Jr.

Cleveland

AL 30

 

1997

Nomar Garciaparra

Boston

AL 30

 

1998

Eric Davis

Baltimore

AL 30

 

1999

Luis Gonzalez

Arizona

NL 30

 

2003

Albert Pujols

St. Louis

NL 30

2006

Willy Taveras

Houston

NL 30

 

2007

Moises Alou

New York

NL

30

2009 Ryan Zimmerman Washington NL 30
2011 Andre Ethier Los Angeles NL 30

Rank

Yearn

Name

Team League Games

 

 

 

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