Charlie Blackmon Is Chasing .500… For Now
In the run-up to the 60-game 2020 season, colleagues Craig Edwards and Dan Szymborski were among the many writers in the industry who weighed in on the possibility of a player hitting .400 or better. They used lots of fancy math and projections to do so, but it’s already clear that both laid down on the job by failing to estimate the odds of a player hitting .500, as Rockies right fielder Charlie Blackmon was through Tuesday night. Can’t anybody here play this game?
Blackmon’s 3-for-4 performance against the Diamondbacks on Tuesday extended his hitting streak to 15 games, which is tied with the Giants’ Donovan Solano for the major league high this year; during that span, he hit .567/.591/.817. The three-hit game also marked Blackmon’s sixth straight with multiple hits, tied with the Mariners’ Kyle Lewis for the big league high; over that span, he hit .739/.778/1.174 — that’s 17 hits in 23 at-bats, and without a single strikeout, to boot.
Blackmon entered Wednesday afternoon’s game against the Diamondbacks — in which he went 0-for-4 with a walk, but don’t let that tangle my yarn — at .500/.527/.721, with 34 hits through 17 games. As best as I can tell using Baseball-Reference’s Stathead service (the updated version of the Play Index), that’s tied for fourth since 1901:
| Rk | Player | Year | Team | H | PA | AVG | OBP | SLG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nap Lajoie* | 1901 | Athletics | 37 | 70 | .578 | .614 | .938 |
| 2T | Stan Musial* | 1958 | Cardinals | 36 | 80 | .529 | .588 | .853 |
| Hank Aaron* | 1959 | Braves | 36 | 77 | .500 | .494 | .972 | |
| 4T | Carl Reynolds | 1934 | Red Sox | 34 | 74 | .507 | .554 | .791 |
| Pete Rose | 1976 | Reds | 34 | 85 | .466 | .541 | .616 | |
| Charlie Blackmon | 2020 | Rockies | 34 | 74 | .500 | .527 | .721 | |
| Dante Bichette | 1998 | Rockies | 34 | 77 | .453 | .455 | .587 | |
| Larry Walker* | 1997 | Rockies | 34 | 79 | .507 | .582 | 1.030 | |
| Nap Lajoie* | 1904 | Naps | 34 | 73 | .486 | .507 | .670 |
That’s some company, with four Hall of Famers — one a repeat customer, topping the list in the American League’s inaugural season (expansion alert!) — and the all-time hits leader, plus the Rockies’ original right fielder (Bichette) as well as the already-counted Hall of Famer who bumped him to left field upon arriving in 1995 (Walker). The one you don’t know about is Reynolds, a well-traveled outfielder from a high-offense era; he played for five teams in 13 years from 1927-39, batting as high as .359 for the White Sox in 1930, the year that offense was off the charts. Read the rest of this entry »
Dan Szymborski