The Jerusalem Post

Ageless Ichiro joins MLB’s exclusive 3,000-hit club

- By Mark Lamport-Stokes

If there was any doubt that Ichiro is a first-ballot Hall of Famer (which there really wasn’t), one number should erase that. That number? 3,000. In case you weren’t paying attention, the former Mariners star is still churning out hits like it’s 2001, and on Sunday Ichiro collected his most monumental hit of them all – hit No. 3,000. The 42-year-old joined the 3,000-hit club in emphatic fashion with a triple against Colorado Rockies reliever Chris Rusin in the seventh inning of the Miami Marlins’ 10-7 road victory.

Ichiro’s long fly ball bounced off the wall in right and toward the infield, and Ichiro easily reached third base, where his Marlins teammates – emptying out of the nearby visitors’ dugout – mobbed him.

The game paused ever briefly, with the Coors Field crowd of 40,875 giving Ichiro another round of applause and the scoreboard displaying a graphic noting the moment. Ichiro tipped his cap to acknowledg­e the fans.

The Marlins’ Japanese outfielder became the 30th Major League Baseball player to reach the 3,000-hit milestone, an exclusive club that is considered the greatest measure of hitting excellence and physical endurance.

Ichiro, who in 2001 became the first Japanese position player, or non-pitcher, in MLB, joins Roberto Clemente (Puerto Rico), Rod Carew (Panama) and Rafael Palmeiro (Cuba) as the only members of the 3,000-hit club born outside the United States.

In the midst of an improbable resurgence with the Marlins, Ichiro achieved the feat against the Colorado Rockies on his fourth at-bat of the day when he slugged a triple off the right field wall in the seventh inning in Denver.

“My first three at-bats my body felt so heavy. But after that hit a burden was lifted,” Ichiro told reporters.

The historic hit nearly was a home run, but bounced off the top of the wall and eluded Colorado outfielder Gerardo Parra.

Ichiro reached third base while standing up and stood there nonchalant­ly as though it was just another routine hit.

The Colorado crowd gave him a rousing ovation while Suzuki’s teammates poured out of the third-base dugout to celebrate the moment. Rockies’ players stood and applauded at the dugout rail.

“More than the number itself, you saw my teammates come out and how happy they were and how warm the fans were,” Ichiro said. “It’s about my team mates and the fans, and that’s how I felt today.”

Ichiro, who did not break into the major leagues until he was 27, is the second oldest player to reach 3,000 hits at 42 years, 290 days.

Former teammate and five-time World Series champion Derek Jeter, a 13-time All-Star who retired from MLB after the 2014 season, described Ichiro as one the game’s all-time greats.

“Congratula­tions to my friend and teammate Ichiro on joining the 3000 hit club,” Jeter, who played parts of three seasons with Ichiro as members of the New York Yankees, said in a statement.

“I was fortunate to have both the pleasure of competing against him and the honor of playing alongside him. Baseball is more than a game to him, it is a craft, which he works at tirelessly with intense discipline.

“A true profession­al in every sense of the word, this is just another milestone in the legacy he is building as a player”

Now in his 16th season, Ichiro hasn’t shown many signs of slowing down. He’s hitting .318 in 94 games this season for Miami.

Ichiro made his MLB debut with the Seattle Mariners and went on to became only the second player to win Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player awards in the same season.

He also opened his MLB career with a record 10 consecutiv­e seasons of more than 200 hits.

A 10-time All-Star, Ichiro won a Gold Glove Award in each of his first 10 years in the majors, and has had an American League record of seven hitting streaks of 20 or more games, with a high of 27.

He helped lead Japan to consecutiv­e titles in the World Baseball Classic in 2006 and 2009.

“When you consider also what he accomplish­ed in Japan, Ichiro was and is an internatio­nal baseball superstar,” Mariners chairman Howard Lincoln said in a statement.

“Prior to Ichiro’s first game for the Mariners in 2001, the late Pancho Ito, a Japanese baseball broadcaste­r and historian, said, ‘He is a genius with the bat.’ Mr. Ito was absolutely correct. “A tip of the Mariners cap to Ichiro.”

 ?? (Reuters) ?? WHILE BOTH among baseball’s most talented and intriguing characters over the course of their respective careers, the legacies built by Alex Rodriguez (left) and Ichiro Suzuki (right, pictured above in 2006) are vastly different. The 41-year-old A-Rod...
(Reuters) WHILE BOTH among baseball’s most talented and intriguing characters over the course of their respective careers, the legacies built by Alex Rodriguez (left) and Ichiro Suzuki (right, pictured above in 2006) are vastly different. The 41-year-old A-Rod...
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel