翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ HIV/AIDS in Guatemala
・ HIV/AIDS in Guinea
・ HIV/AIDS in Guyana
・ HIV/AIDS in Haiti
・ HIV/AIDS in Honduras
・ HIV/AIDS in India
・ HIV/AIDS in Indonesia
・ HIV/AIDS in Iraq
・ HIV/AIDS in Ivory Coast
・ Hittin' the Road (Outlaws album)
・ Hittin' the Trail
・ Hittin' the Trail for Hallelujah Land
・ Hitting a New High
・ Hitting for the cycle
・ Hitting mechanics
Hitting streak
・ Hitting the Fan
・ Hitting the Ground
・ Hitting the wall
・ Hitting time
・ Hittinger
・ Hittisau
・ Hittisau Women's Museum
・ Hittisleigh
・ Hittite
・ Hittite cuisine
・ Hittite cuneiform
・ Hittite Glory
・ Hittite grammar
・ Hittite language


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Hitting streak : ウィキペディア英語版
Hitting streak
In baseball, a hitting streak refers to the number of consecutive official games in which a player appears and gets at least one base hit.
According to the Official Baseball Rules, such a streak is ended when a player has at least 1 plate appearance and no hits. A streak shall not be terminated if all official plate appearances result in a base on balls, hit by pitch, defensive interference or a sacrifice bunt. The streak shall terminate if the player has a sacrifice fly and no hit.
Joe DiMaggio holds the Major League Baseball record with a streak of 56 consecutive games in 1941 which began on May 15 and ended July 17. DiMaggio hit .408 during his streak (91 for 223), with 15 home runs and 55 RBIs.
==Major League Baseball records==

There have been 55 occurrences in Major League Baseball where a player had a hitting streak of at least 30 games.〔(Consecutive Games Hitting Streaks )〕 Multiple streaks in the same season have occurred in 1922 (George Sisler and Rogers Hornsby), 1987 (Paul Molitor and Benito Santiago), 1997 (Nomar Garciaparra and Sandy Alomar, Jr.), 1999 (Vladimir Guerrero and Luis Gonzalez), 2006 (Chase Utley and Willy Taveras), and 2011 (Andre Ethier and Dan Uggla). In addition, 1924 included one whole streak (Sam Rice) and the beginning of another (George Sisler). A similar event occurred in 2006 with two whole streaks (Utley and Taveras) and the end of another (Jimmy Rollins).
Keeler's streak started in his final game of the 1896 season, and continued through the first 44 games of the 1897 season. Rollins ended the 2005 season with a 36-game streak and extended it through the first two games of the 2006 season. Sisler had a hit in the last game of 1924 and the first 34 games of 1925. Major League Baseball recognizes two hitting streak records: Longest hitting streak in one season, and longest hitting streak over multiple seasons (e.g. Rollins 2005–2006).〔(ESPN – Phils' Rollins extends streak to 36 games – MLB )〕 Keeler's, Sisler's, and Rollins' streaks are listed as 44, 34, and 36 games when discussing ''single-season'' streaks, and 45, 35, and 38 games when discussing ''multiple-season'' streaks.
This list omits Denny Lyons of the 1887 American Association Philadelphia Athletics, who had a 52-game hitting streak. In 1887, the major leagues adopted a new rule which counted walks as hits, a rule which was dropped after that season. Lyons hit in 52 consecutive games that season, but his streak included two games (#22 and #44) in which his only "hits" were walks. In 1968, MLB ruled that walks in 1887 would not be counted as hits, so Lyons' streak was no longer recognized, though it still appears on some lists. In 2000 Major League Baseball reversed its 1968 decision, ruling that the statistics which were recognized in each year's official records should stand, even in cases where they were later proven incorrect. Paradoxically, the ruling affects only hit ''totals'' for the year; the batting champion for the year is not recognized as the all-time leader despite having the highest single-season average under the ruling, and Lyons' hitting streak is not recognized.
Ty Cobb, Sam Rice, and George Sisler are the only players with multiple streaks of 30 games or longer.
There have been 129 single-season streaks of 25 games or more. The lowest batting average ever recorded during a hitting streak of 25 games or more was .304 by Bruce Campbell in 1938. The highest was .486 during Chuck Klein's streak in 1930. Joe DiMaggio hit .408 during his record-holding 56 game streak.〔(NY Times, August 7, 2011 – "For the Braves’ Uggla, Luck Is Not a Statistic" – by Rob Neyer )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Hitting streak」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.