From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For other uses of this term, see Triple crown
In baseball, the Triple Crown refers to:
- A batter who (at season's end) leads the league in three major categories -- home runs, runs batted in, and batting average.
- A pitcher who (at season's end) leads the league in three major categories -- earned run average, wins, and strikeouts.
In the popular imagination, the Triple Crown is often thought of as the epitome of excellence in batting or pitching (even though sabermetric categories claim to be better measures of a player's productivity than the traditional Triple Crown categories). The batting Triple Crown is less common, and has not been achieved since 1967. Usually, when the "Triple Crown" is referred to without specifying batting or pitching, the batting Triple Crown is meant.
[edit] Fast facts
[edit] Batting
- Last Triple Crown winner: Carl Yastrzemski, BOS, 1967.
- Last American League Triple Crown Winner (lead AL in all 3 categories): Carl Yastrzemski, BOS, 1967.
- Last National League Triple Crown Winner (lead NL in all 3 categories): Joe Medwick, STL, 1937.
- Only Two-Time Winners: Rogers Hornsby, STL, 1922, 1925; Ted Williams, BOS, 1942, 1947.
[edit] Pitching
- Last Triple Crown Winner: Jake Peavy, SDP, 2007.
- Last American League Triple Crown Winner (lead AL in all 3 categories): Johan Santana, MIN, 2006.
- Last National League Triple Crown Winner (lead NL in all 3 categories): Jake Peavy, SDP, 2007.
- Most Triple Crowns: Grover Cleveland Alexander, 4 (PHI, 1915, 1916, 1917; CHI, 1920); Walter Johnson, 3 (WSH, 1913, 1918, 1924); Sandy Koufax, 3 (LAD, 1963, 1965, 1966).
[edit] Batting Triple Crown winners
[edit] National League winners
[edit] American League winners
[edit] American Association winners
[edit] Pitching Triple Crown winners
[edit] National League winners
[edit] American League winners
[edit] American Association winners
[edit] Major League Triple Crown
In general, when one refers to a player as having won a Triple Crown, they mean that the player led his own league in the three categories. A superior but less frequent circumstance is the Major League Triple Crown, wherein which the player leads the entire major leagues, not just his own league, in each of the three categories. Since the birth of the American League in 1901, five hitters and eight pitchers have accomplished this feat, although Walter Johnson, Grover Cleveland Alexander, and Lefty Grove have done it twice for pitching, and Sandy Koufax has done it three times. The most recent Major League Triple Crown Winners were Mickey Mantle in 1956 for hitting, and Johan Santana in 2006 for pitching.
[edit] Major League Winners - batting
[edit] Major League Winners - pitching
[edit] Batting Triple Crown losers
A Triple Crown loser is a player who finishes last in each of the three batting Triple Crown categories in his league. To be considered, the player must meet the same qualifications required for the league batting title. There has been a Triple Crown loser only twelve times, with one player, Freddie Maguire, accomplishing this feat twice. One, Ozzie Smith, made the Hall of Fame, largely because of his extraordinary fielding ability (however, he became a considerably better hitter for average later in his career).
[edit] American League Triple Crown losers
[edit] National League Triple Crown losers
[edit] References
- Gammons, Peter; Gillette, Gary; Palmer, Pete. The ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia, Fourth Edition (Espn Baseball Encyclopedia). Sterling. ISBN 978-1-4027-4771-7.
[edit] External links
- List at Baseball Reference