When Earl Averill retired in 1941, he was one of the baseball’s true greats. The Hall of Fame centerfielder ranked high on the all-time leaderboard in most of the meaningful categories. He was in the top-80 in hits (77th), runs (61st), doubles (42nd), triples (73rd), homers (15th), total bases (42nd), RBI (41st)and WAR (49th).
Since then the game has evolved and many who’ve followed have passed the Cleveland legend.
Shown here is a historic game-used lineup card signed by Tom Trebelhorn as manager of the Milwaukee Brewers. Notice Willie Randolph batting 7th and playing second base. In this contest of May 17th, 1991 at Royals Stadium, Randolph tied Averill on the all-time hits list.
Randolph came up in the 10th inning of a 5-5 tie with Dante Bichette on first and one out. Royals pitcher Mark Davis a one-ball-one-strike pitch that Willie hit up the middle for a base hit. Two batters later Dale Sveum hit a triple to plate both runners in the Brewers 7-5 win.
Randolph’s base hit was the 2,019th of his career to match Averill. Nine days later he went 2-for-4 to pass the pass career total. Fittingly the game came at Cleveland for whom Averill represented in baseball’s first six All Star Games.
Also in the Brewers lineup that day was Cooperstown’s Robin Yount. Playing centerfield, he went 2-for-4 with a run and a double. That two-base hit was the 506th of Yount’s illustrious Hall of Fame career. That was quite literally a Ruthian feat as he matched the career total of the great Babe Ruth
By the time he retired in 1993, Yount’s 583 doubles were more than all but ten players in the history of the game. Cooperstown’s class of 1999, Yount signed this lineup card and added the inscription, “Passed Babe Ruth on doubles list”.
By the time he retired in 1993, Yount’s 583 doubles were more than all but ten players in the history of the game. Cooperstown’s class of 1999, Yount signed this lineup card and added the inscription, “Passed Babe Ruth on doubles list”.