Pujols among best hitters in history
We live in an era of home run fatigue, with an entire generation of baseball fans, having already witnessed the obliteration of once-hallowed numbers such as 755 and 61, now growing accustomed to a grotesque recalibration of historic milestones.
Fifty homers in a season, or 500 in a career, used to mean far more than they do now. Fly balls are leaving ballparks at an unprecedented rate this season, 1.23 per team per game, each one a brick in the construction of a gaudy new skyscraper where a historic monument once sat.
It would be easy, in this atmosphere, to dismiss Albert Pujols’s 600th career homer, struck late Saturday night in Anaheim, as just another manifestation of the overall cheapening of the home run. He became the ninth member of baseball’s 600-home-run club, but the sixth to get there in the past 15 years. Babe Ruth was alone in that room for 38 years, then Ruth, Hank Aaron and Willie Mays had it to themselves for another 31. But lately it’s got crowded.
But there is nothing cheap about Pujols’s ascent. The Los Angeles Angels designated hitter became the fourth-youngest member of the club, behind only Ruth, Alex Rodriguez and Aaron.
And it’s not as if another wave of new members is on its way, as happened between 2007 and 2011, when Sammy Sosa, Ken Griffey Jr., Rodriguez and Jim Thome all reached 600 homers. Miguel Cabrera, 34 years old and sitting on 451 homers, has a chance to reach 600 if he can stay healthy and productive for another few years, but there isn’t another obvious, projectable candidate after that. It’s entirely possible the 600-homer barrier won’t be breached again until the Mike Trout-Bryce Harper generation, another 12 to 15 years down the road.
The fact is, leaving defence aside, you could make a convincing case that Pujols is the greatest righthanded hitter in history; at a minimum, he is in the discussion, along with Mays, Aaron, Cabrera, Rodriguez, Frank Robinson, Ramirez and Jimmy Foxx.
He needs just 124 hits to reach 3,000, which would gain him entry to the 3,000-hit/600-homer club, of which there are only three members — Aaron, Rodriguez and Mays.