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Originally Posted by Cory
Somewhere on Twitter (or Facebook?) I always see crazy Tony Gwynn stats. Haven't committed any to memory, so I had to look some up (link below)-
Gwynn finished his career batting .302 with two strikes. That's easily the best mark for any player since numbers were first tracked by count in the mid-1970s. Wade Boggs comes in second at .262. In fact, in 1994, Gwynn batted an absurd .397 in two-strike counts. This one is mind-blowing to me - a 300 hitter with 2 strikes over a 20 year career.
Including postseason play, Gwynn faced 18 Hall of Fame pitchers for a total of 541 plate appearances. That’s essentially a full season’s worth of plate appearances exclusively against Hall of Famers. Gwynn batted .331/.371/.426.
Gwynn batted .300 in every season but his rookie year, giving him a record 19 straight seasons above .300. J.D. Martinez is the current leader with four straight .300-plus seasons.
Gwynn faced Greg Maddux 107 times in his career -- more than any other pitcher. He batted .415/.476/.521 against the four-time Cy Young Award winner and Hall of Famer. That's easily the highest average against Maddux for any player with at least 70 plate appearances. - I include this one as everyone needs to google the Maddux interview about Tony Gwynn.
https://www.mlb.com/news/19-facts-ab...ynn-c177069734
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Gwynn has a lot of wild stats.
Maddux and Pedro never managed to strike him out even once in significant sample sizes.
Struck out 3 times in a game only once. Struck out twice in a game only 34 times in 2,440 games.
Went 20 consecutive games or more without a strikeout 11 different times in his career.
Made every all star game from 1984 to 1999 except for 1988, a year in which he won the batting title and was 11th in MVP voting.
He would have to get 0 hits over more than 1,100 at bats to drop below a .300 average.