这是在ProTrade上看到的文章
觉得还满有趣的所以就po上来了~
Records 6-10 are unlikely to ever be broken (yet it could be done)
whereas 1-5 will stand forever.
10. Orel Hershiser - 59 straight scoreless innings - A pitcher would
have to pitch 6 straight shutouts, then pitch 5 more scoreless in his
next start. The way HRs are hit today, no way this is broken.
9. Johnny Vander Meer - 2 Consecutive No-Hitters - 1938 - Throwing a no
hitter is a rare feat...we see about 0-3 each year. For the same pitcher
to do it twice in a row would be spectacular. That, however, would only
be tieing the record. For someone to break the record by pitching 3
straight NoNos is almost unthinkable.
8. Ty Cobb - 54 Steals of Home (career) - How often do we see stealing of
home? I don't know if home has been stolen 54 times in the last 10 years,
let alone by one player.
7. Cal Ripken Jr. - 2,632 Consecutive Games (career) - Equal to playing
every game for 16 straight years. Would seem to be unbreakable, but that's
what people said about Gerhig's record too.
6. Nolan Ryan - 7 No Hitters (career) - Once again, a NoNo is a rare feat.
To do it 7 times in a career is a pretty safe record.
Now, the No Way These Ever Get Broken:
5. Rickey Henderson - 1,406 Stolen Bases (career) - To match this record,
a player would have to steal 100 bases for 14 straight years. Considering
no one has stolen 100 bases in 20 years, this record is unbeatable. The
active leader is Kenny Lofton with 615 SBs. His single season career high
is 75 in 1996 (He was a TRIBE by the way). If he steals 75 bases for the
next 10 and a half years, he will break the record. He's already 40 years
old.
4. Connie Mack - 3,776 games won as a manager (career) - 37 100 win seasons
(no one won 100 last year). Or, start managing when you're 40. Retire when
you're 85. Win 84 games a year and the record is yours. Active leader Tony
La Russa only has 1,400 more wins to go. With a .526 career winning percentage,
Larussa only needs to manage 2,662 more games, or 16 more seasons. Not very
likely since he's 63 years old, and since the Cardinals suck. La Russa may
be the last hope to break this record, but I don't see it happening.
3. Ty Cobb - .367 BA (career)* - Tony Gwynn was a career .338 hitter. Todd
Helton, the active leader, is a .333 hitter. Considering only 4 active
players have hit over .367 in a single season (Bonds, Helton, Garciaparra,
and Ichiro), I don't see this record ever being broken.
*As per MLB rules, min. 5000 AB
2. Walter Johnson - 110 Shutouts (career) - Highest active total is Roger
Clemens with 46, meaning that if his next 64 starts (2 full seasons) are
all shutouts, then he proves me wrong.
1. Cy Young - 511 Wins (career) - 30 wins for 17 years. Or, go the easy
route winning "only" 20 games for 25 years. Enough said.
I'm sure you all out there will determine the honorable mentions