In our earlier look at players who were immune to scoring runs, reader blocher asked about guys who hit a lot of home runs but otherwise didn't score much. He mentioned Andre Dawson's 1987 campaign, in which Dawson hit 49 homers but scored only 90 runs.
That is a 1.84 HR/R ratio, which is low, but not one of the 10 lowest in history among batting title qualifiers since 1901:
Player |
Year |
R/HR |
||
1997 |
86 |
58 |
1.48 |
|
1994 |
74 |
43 |
1.72 |
|
2001 |
129 |
73 |
1.77 |
|
1962 |
85 |
48 |
1.77 |
|
1992 |
77 |
43 |
1.79 |
|
2006 |
104 |
58 |
1.79 |
|
1968 |
79 |
44 |
1.80 |
|
1975 |
65 |
36 |
1.81 |
|
1999 |
114 |
63 |
1.81 |
|
1969 |
49 |
27 |
1.81 |
A few observations:
-
All of these hitters accomplished the feat in the so-called Expansion Era.
-
McGwire's ratio is ridiculous, especially considering that he drew 101 walks that year. We have to drop to a minimum of 300 plate appearances to find a lower ratio (more on that in a moment).
-
Two of these guys had an OBP better than .400: Bonds (.515) and Ryan Howard (.425).
-
Two had an OBP worse than .300: Kingman (.284) and Pepitone (.284).
-
Mark Trumbo is threatening to crack this list in 2012. Through August 15, he had scored 56 runs while knocking 29 homers, for a 1.93 R/HR ratio. Trumbo is the only qualifier this season with a ratio lower than 2, although Adam Dunn (2.00) and Billy Butler (2.05) are close.
Here are the career “leaders” among players with at least 2,000 plate appearances:
Player |
Years |
R/HR |
||
1981-1993 |
351 |
181 |
1.94 |
|
Mark McGwire* |
1986-2001 |
1167 |
583 |
2.00 |
1982-1991 |
356 |
176 |
2.02 |
|
Dave Kingman* |
1971-1986 |
901 |
442 |
2.04 |
1998-2011 |
405 |
194 |
2.09 |
|
Ryan Howard* |
2004-2012 |
643 |
293 |
2.19 |
1958-1969 |
506 |
228 |
2.22 |
|
2002-2011 |
256 |
115 |
2.23 |
|
Harmon Killebrew* |
1954-1975 |
1283 |
573 |
2.24 |
1962-1970 |
242 |
108 |
2.24 |
*Also appears in single-season list
To the bullet points:
-
How awesome would it be to see a footrace with these guys in their prime?
-
The career leader, Balboni, doesn't crack our single-season list because he qualified for the batting title just twice in his career.
-
Balboni also is the guy with a lower ratio than McGwire's 1.48. In 1990, Bye-Bye scored 24 runs while hitting 17 homers, for a 1.41 ratio in 307 plate appearances.
-
The one active player, Ryan Howard, would need to hit 80 home runs without scoring on any other play to beat Balboni's career mark.
-
No seriously, a footrace would be awesome.
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