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Ichiro Suzuki has long cherished baseball history and he has visited Cooperstown in New York. Now it’s his turn to be ...
Seattle Mariners legend Ichiro Suzuki will be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday, July 27, and a prominent group of Mariners legends will be there in Cooperstown with him. The Hall of ...
In 2001 when I came I didn’t feel like this was the first time being in America playing baseball. ... So it was a great start ...
At some point in the next week or two, Ichiro Suzuki will collect his 3,000th major league hit and become the 30th player ever to reach that milestone. The Marlins begin a lengthy homestand on ...
With the 1,278 he got while playing for Orix in Japan’s Pacific League, Ichiro’s 4,367 hits are the most in professional baseball history. And he’s one of just seven players in MLB history ...
Global baseball's hit king Ichiro Suzuki became the first Japanese-born player elected to Major League baseball's Hall of Fame on Tuesday, just one vote shy of unanimous selection. In his first ...
Ichiro Suzuki sped into the U.S. National Baseball Hall of Fame on Tuesday the same way he electrified baseball since he was a rising young star in Japan 30 years earlier by highlighting the ...
Ichiro, 50, trekked to the village in upstate New York, home of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, seven times between 2001 and 2016. He has toured the museum more than any active or recently ...
There is, put simply, not a single argument for leaving Ichiro out of the Baseball Hall of Fame, nor is there an argument that he wasn't one of the 10 most deserving players on this year's ballot.
Congratulations to Ichiro, C.C. Sabathia, and Billy Wagner on their election to the Hall of Fame. Sorry so many people have decided to focus on Ichiro's election not being unanimous. "Ichiro ...
Ichiro will go into the Hall of Fame as professional baseball’s all-time leader in hits with 4,367 (3,089 in MLB and 1,278 in Japan) — more even than Pete Rose's 4,256. He broke George Sisler ...
Nobody in baseball history, not even Jackie Robinson, dealt with quite the sort of media scrutiny that Ichiro dealt with that first spring training (and, to be honest, the rest of his career as well).