This is our old blog. It hasn't been active since 2011. Please see the link above for our current blog or click the logo above to see all of the great data and content on this site.

Times-on-base streaks

Posted by Andy on November 16, 2007

As a reader asked for, here are the longest streaks for reaching base at least once per game, broken down by position.

All streaks are since 1957, and the player must have appeared at the given position in each game.

                   StreakStart  Streak End Games    AB    R    H   2B  3B  HR  RBI  SO   BB   SB   CS   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS  Teams   Position
+-----------------+-----------+-----------+-----+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Victor Martinez    2005-09-17  2006-05-06    43    169   35   64  19   0   6   28   24   22    0   1  .379  .448  .598 1.046 CLE     C
 Frank Thomas       1995-06-29  1996-05-31    90    334   83  115  24   0  28   86   51   72    2   1  .344  .453  .668 1.121 CHW     1B
 t- Eric Young      1995-08-17  1996-05-06    47    187   33   67  13   3   5   23   14   27   20   5  .358  .447  .540  .987 COL     2B
 t- Lou Whitaker    1991-05-31  1991-08-06    47    172   34   56   7   2   9   26   16   27    0   1  .326  .414  .547  .961 DET     2B
 George Brett       1980-05-22  1980-09-19    76    306   65  138  25   5  17   85   15   39   11   6  .451  .507  .732 1.239 KCR     3B
 Orlando Cabrera    2006-04-25  2006-07-06    63    251   45   76  18   1   3   32   19   27   10   1  .303  .372  .418  .790 LAA     SS
 Barry Bonds        2003-06-27  2003-09-20    57    161   56   63  12   0  24   44   19   76    0   0  .391  .587  .913 1.500 SFG     LF
 Jimmy Wynn         1969-06-04  1969-08-03    52    174   44   56  11   1  11   35   45   63   16   4  .322  .500  .586 1.086 HOU     CF
 t- Shawn Green     2000-04-25  2000-06-23    53    195   39   67  18   2   9   45   42   38   11   2  .344  .458  .595 1.053 LAD     RF
 t- Paul O'Neill    1996-04-09  1996-06-12    53    197   38   66  14   1   6   37   26   46    0   1  .335  .459  .508  .967 NYY     RF
 Edgar Martinez     2001-04-20  2001-08-10    69    258   45   80  22   0  13   70   46   48    4   0  .310  .420  .547  .967 SEA     DH
 Rick Rhoden        1984-07-20  1985-04-09    15     44    7   20   4   0   0    3    5    1    0   0  .455  .467  .545 1.012 PIT     P
 t- Tim Teufel      1987-08-01  1987-09-01     9     15    3    8   1   0   0    4    3    2    0   0  .533  .588  .600 1.188 NYM     PH
 t- Lloyd Moseby    1983-05-03  1984-08-30     9     15    3    8   2   0   0    3    1    3    1   0  .533  .611  .667 1.278 TOR     PH
 t- Dave Philley    1958-09-09  1959-04-16     9      9    2    9   3   0   1    9    0    0    0   0 1.000 1.000 1.667 2.667 PHI     PH

First of all, folks, that's why Frank Thomas is going to be a first-ballot HOFer one day. Ninety straight games getting on base! Whew!

Ties occurred where marked. Note that there is quite a lot of variation in the above list. Orlando Cabrera reached base in 63 straight games last year while managing an OPS of just .790. Mind you at least he had a nice .372 OBP during that period. Compare that with Brett, who scorched the ball to the tune of a 1.239 OPS over 76 games. That's got to be one of the highest all-time figures for any 70+ stretch of games.

Notice, too, that if you compare this list with the hit streak list from a few posts back, these streaks are all a lot more recent. I suppose that it's in large part because the walk rate is pretty high these days.

And now, longest streaks of not reaching base, also by position:

                   StreakStart  Streak End Games    AB    R    H   2B  3B  HR  RBI  SO   BB   SB   CS   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS  Teams   Position
+-----------------+-----------+-----------+-----+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 t- Wil Nieves      2005-09-02  2007-05-06    15     31    1    0   0   0   0    1    4    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 NYY        C
 t- Larry Haney     1969-08-08  1969-09-10    15     23    0    0   0   0   0    1    5    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 OAK        C
 Dan Meyer          1983-05-27  1983-09-05    13     42    0    0   0   0   0    0    3    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 OAK        1B
 Al Weis            1966-06-06  1966-08-09    17     37    3    0   0   0   0    0    9    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 CHW        2B
 Tim Bogar          1994-04-04  1995-08-04    11     19    0    0   0   0   0    2    3    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 NYM        3B
 Al Pedrique        1988-08-24  1989-06-07    14     26    0    0   0   0   0    0    5    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 PIT-DET    SS
 Mike Huff          1993-05-01  1993-09-27    12     16    1    0   0   0   0    1    4    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 CHW        LF
 Mike Felder        1987-09-20  1989-05-07    10     16    1    0   0   0   0    1    4    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 MIL        CF
 Mel Queen          1966-05-08  1966-08-22    11     16    0    0   0   0   0    1    3    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 CIN        RF
 Willie Norwood     1979-08-31  1980-06-20    11     26    0    0   0   0   0    0    7    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 MIN        DH
 John Wyatt         1962-08-20  1967-08-03    48     50    0    0   0   0   0    0   32    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 KCA-BOS    P
 Gary Rajsich       1982-04-09  1982-09-03    32     32    0    0   0   0   0    0   14    0    0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000 NYM        PH

These streaks have the same caveat as the hitless streaks from a few days ago: most of these players played many intervening games at other positions where they got on base plenty of times. To a certainly regard, many of these streaks are just odd freak things. Do we believe that Mike Felder hit a lot worse when playing CF than he did playing LF? I for one don't. Really, this isn't a lot more than a statistical oddity.

However, what in the heck were the Mets doing in 1982, continuing to let Gary Rajsich pinch hit? From the start of the season, he made 32 consecutive pinch-hitting appearances where he did not get on base. Why in the world did they do that? Mind you, for the rest of the season (not as a pinch-hitter), Rajsich hit over .300.

7 Responses to “Times-on-base streaks”

  1. iiicollies Says:

    How can Big Hurt have a 90 game on-base streak from 1995 to 1996 if his longest streak in 1995 was 29 games (6-29 to 7-29) and the one in 1996 was 52 games (3-31 to 5-31)? Oh, now I see. Dang, they never should had put him in as DH!

  2. Andy Says:

    Yeah...this kind of positional thing is definitely somewhat biased toward fluky behavior.

  3. Samurai Sam Says:

    Ted Williams' record streak obviously isn't listed, because he did it before 1957.

  4. vonhayes Says:

    Ted's streak is more impressive to me than Joe Dimaggio's. How many games was it exactly?

  5. jackfish Says:

    We all know that Wynn doesn't hold the all time record in centerfield because of Joe DiMaggio's 56 game hitting streak in 1941. Joe D actually reached base in 74 consecutive games that season via either a walk or a hit.
    Also I'm suprised to see that F. Thomas reached base 90 consecutive times. I always thought that Ted Williams held the record with 84 consecutive times in 1949. I know that Williams did it with only walks & hits. Did Thomas's streak include fielder's choices, catcher's interference or reach base on errors or did he simply break Williams record?

  6. Andy Says:

    As pointed out by comment #1 above, Thomas' streak was interrupted by appearances at DH where he didn't reach base. This streak considers only his appearances at 1B, and is one of the big reasons why so many people argued that he should never have been made a DH because he hit "so much better" as a 1B. We talked about this before, but Thomas has an OPS that's 170 points better as a 1B compared to DH, although it's tough to distinguish decrease in performance with increased age since he mainly played 1B early on and DHed later.

  7. FCAlive Says:

    Thomas probably was the DH more when he was having problems with injuries (even within a season), so it isn't too surprising that he did not hit as well then either.