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The Face of a Franchise – Most PA’s for 1 Franchise

Posted by Raphy on September 7, 2009

As Derek Jeter approaches Lou Gehrig's record for hits as a Yankee, I can't help but notice the sheer number of plate appearances that Jeter has accumulated for the team.  Jeter, who leads  all Yankees  ever in AB and is second in PA, has more PA for the Yankees than any other active player has for any other  franchise. Here are the current leaders in plate appearance for a franchise among active players:

Derek Jeter*     New York Yankees   9707
Chipper Jones*   Atlanta Braves     9185
Garret Anderson  Angels             8480
Todd Helton*     Colorado Rockies   7662
Andruw Jones     Atlanta Braves     7276
Ken Griffey Jr.* Seattle Mariners   7070

* active with the team listed

In baseball history only  22  players have had at least 10,000 PA for a franchise. Here are the top ten:

Carl Yastrzemski    Red Sox    13,991
Hank Aaron          Braves     13,089
Cal Ripken          Orioles    12,883
Stan Musial         Cardinals  12,712
Craig Biggio        Astros     12,503
Pete Rose           Reds       12,325
Robin Yount         Brewers    12,249
Ty Cobb             Tigers     12,105
Willie Mays         Giants     12,012
Brooks Robinson     Orioles    11,782

4 Responses to “The Face of a Franchise – Most PA’s for 1 Franchise”

  1. jksesq1 Says:

    Cool article, thanks.

    FWIW, probably not much, the top 5 becomes Yaz-Aaron-Musial-Ripken-Cobb if you correct for shorter seasons before 1963 (I used 154 games although obviously there was more variance than that).

    Of course, Cal and Biggio missed PA's during strikes, but since those were voluntary, I usually don't correct for them in my stats 🙂 (although I love both players).

    Also, should just point out that Musial missed the entire 1945 season due to WWII -- expected PA's, 687, based on +- 2 year averages). So had he not missed that season, he almost certainly would have been 2nd on the list, without adjustment, or first with adjustments.

  2. tomepp Says:

    Not surprisingly, six of the top 10 listed played their entire careers for one franchise. Two of the other four (Aaron and Mays) had brief "homecoming tours" at the end of their careers in the original cities their franchises left. Only Rose had more than 1000 plate appearances (3536, mostly with the Phillies) with another club; and he, too, ended his career with two-plus seasons back in Cincinnati (though in his case those 879 PA count toward his franchise total). Ty Cobb ended his career with two seasons (967 PA) with the Philadelphia A's.

  3. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    Those '27-'28 A's are interesting teams. In '27, in addition to Cobb, they also had Eddie Collins and Zack Wheat playing out the string, a very young Jimmie Foxx, and then Mickey Cochrane and Lefty Grove in their primes. The following season, Wheat had retired, but Tris Speaker came over for his final season. Seven no-doubt HOFers on each team, but they still couldn't get past the Yankees until '29, when Foxx finally got a full-time job, and the only remaining old-timer was Collins with 9 PA.

  4. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    Oops, forgot to list Al Simmons, also in his prime.