Albert Pujols cracked his 600th home run in June and has 3,000 hits in his sights. What’s next for the top first baseman in history?
ALBERT PUJOLS’ 600TH HOME RUN CAME AMID BARELY A SHRED OF NATIONAL BUZZ. There were 40,236 fans in attendance at Angel Stadium the night of June 3 when he launched a grand slam off the Twins’ Ervin Santana to reach a milestone attained by just eight other players in major league history.
But the general sense of blasé surrounding the event suggested a big swath of the baseball-viewing public was either ambivalent or asleep. Milestone fatigue and the Pacific Time Zone can be a powerful combination in suppressing interest on a national scale.
Inside the workaday bubble, the teammates and opponents, pitchers, hitters, managers and coaches who’ve watched Pujols perform for the past 17 years know what he brings to the equation. Padres bench coach Mark McGwire, who spent the final year of his career as Pujols’ teammate on the 2001 Cardinals, is on board with the idea that the second first baseman to reach the 600 barrier (after Jim Thome) might well be the greatest ever to play the position.
“Nobody in the history of the game did what Albert did for the first 10 years of his career,’’ McGwire said. “Unfortunately, the injuries have slowed him down. But you’ve got 600 home runs and more to come. (Two) Gold Gloves. I can’t say enough. There’s a reason why they call him ‘The Machine,’ because he was ‘The Machine’—the most feared hitter in this game. If he doesn’t go down as the best (first baseman), he’ll go down as the second best.”
This story is from the August 18 2017 edition of Baseball America.
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This story is from the August 18 2017 edition of Baseball America.
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