Yankees Legend Rickey Henderson Dies at 65
Craig Calcaterra, writing at Cup of Coffee:
To say this is a massive loss is about as big an understatement as
is possible. Henderson was the biggest and brightest star of his
generation. There may not have been any player in history who was
better at more things than Rickey Henderson was.
Henderson was, without question, the greatest leadoff hitter of
all time and the greatest base-stealer of all time. He, arguably,
possessed the greatest combination of power and speed of any
player in the history of the game as well. Perhaps the best
characterization of Henderson’s career came from Bill James who
once wrote that, “if you could split Rickey Henderson in two,
you’d have two Hall of Famers.” […]
In 1980, his first full major league season, Henderson broke Ty
Cobb’s 65-year-old American League record for stolen bases by
swiping 100 bags to Cobb’s 96. In 1982 he stole 130 bases,
breaking Hall of Famer Lou Brock’s all-time single-season record
of 118. Henderson’s 130 steals that year stands as the record to
this day. He would lead the American League in stolen bases in
each of his first seven full seasons and nine of his first ten.
He’d lead his league in steals in 12 seasons in all, the last of
which came in 1998 when he was 39 years-old.
On May 1, 1991, Henderson broke Brock’s all-time stolen base
record with his 939th steal and would go on to steal an astounding
1,406 bases before he retired. No player has come anywhere close
to Henderson’s mark in the three decades since he set it and many
doubt anyone ever will.
You have to be really good even to have had been on base that many times, to have had the opportunity to steal 1,400+ bases, let alone to have actually swiped them. He was amazing. He’s best known for his career base-stealing record, but Henderson — thanks to his speed, talent, competitiveness, and remarkable longevity — is also the career leader in runs scored. Scoring runs is how you win — you can make the case that no stat is more important in baseball, and Rickey (as everyone called him, including himself) scored more runs than anyone who ever played. Look at the names on the top 10 for career runs scored:
Rickey Henderson 2,295
Ty Cobb 2,245
Barry Bonds 2,227
Hank Aaron 2,174
Babe Ruth 2,174
Pete Rose 2,165
Willie Mays 2,068
Alex Rodriguez 2,021
Stan Musial 1,949
Derek Jeter 1,923
What a player, and character, he was. Rickey was the most exciting player I ever saw.
★
Craig Calcaterra, writing at Cup of Coffee:
To say this is a massive loss is about as big an understatement as
is possible. Henderson was the biggest and brightest star of his
generation. There may not have been any player in history who was
better at more things than Rickey Henderson was.
Henderson was, without question, the greatest leadoff hitter of
all time and the greatest base-stealer of all time. He, arguably,
possessed the greatest combination of power and speed of any
player in the history of the game as well. Perhaps the best
characterization of Henderson’s career came from Bill James who
once wrote that, “if you could split Rickey Henderson in two,
you’d have two Hall of Famers.” […]
In 1980, his first full major league season, Henderson broke Ty
Cobb’s 65-year-old American League record for stolen bases by
swiping 100 bags to Cobb’s 96. In 1982 he stole 130 bases,
breaking Hall of Famer Lou Brock’s all-time single-season record
of 118. Henderson’s 130 steals that year stands as the record to
this day. He would lead the American League in stolen bases in
each of his first seven full seasons and nine of his first ten.
He’d lead his league in steals in 12 seasons in all, the last of
which came in 1998 when he was 39 years-old.
On May 1, 1991, Henderson broke Brock’s all-time stolen base
record with his 939th steal and would go on to steal an astounding
1,406 bases before he retired. No player has come anywhere close
to Henderson’s mark in the three decades since he set it and many
doubt anyone ever will.
You have to be really good even to have had been on base that many times, to have had the opportunity to steal 1,400+ bases, let alone to have actually swiped them. He was amazing. He’s best known for his career base-stealing record, but Henderson — thanks to his speed, talent, competitiveness, and remarkable longevity — is also the career leader in runs scored. Scoring runs is how you win — you can make the case that no stat is more important in baseball, and Rickey (as everyone called him, including himself) scored more runs than anyone who ever played. Look at the names on the top 10 for career runs scored:
Rickey Henderson 2,295
Ty Cobb 2,245
Barry Bonds 2,227
Hank Aaron 2,174
Babe Ruth 2,174
Pete Rose 2,165
Willie Mays 2,068
Alex Rodriguez 2,021
Stan Musial 1,949
Derek Jeter 1,923
What a player, and character, he was. Rickey was the most exciting player I ever saw.