Atlanta Braves 2010 Milestone Tracker
I like milestones. In the grand perspective of what the game of baseball is, individual achievements are secondary to the greater pursuit of victory, but for the players and fans themselves, we all like to witness some milestones from time to time. For the players, they can be used as leverage for future monetary negotiations, and/or a reminder of what they accomplished in a career that eats so many and spits them out so very unceremoniously. For the fans, it's just a nice feeling to know that they were there when something happened.
For me, in recent years, I can say that I was in the stands when John Smoltz won his 200th game and threw his 3,000th strikeout. I can say that I was at the park the night that Chipper Jones hit his 400th home run. Sure those were some pretty grandiose milestones, and I wish the Braves could say that they have several players striving for some lofty milestones, but believe you me, the media may not make a deal about it, and it might not appear on the screen when they occur, but to the players, who have tendencies to save every small milestones in their career, it does matter. In a game where numbers matter, everything is counted, and executing the little things is what equates to success, these numbers will be important to those striving for them.
Anything that appears italicized indicates the requirement for a career-high, thus making it likely not to happen.
Brian McCann, starting catcher
- Needs 9 HR to reach 100 career HR
- Needs a career-high 111 RBI to reach 500 career RBI
Yunel Escobar, starting shortstop
- 90 more hits will give him a career total of 500 hits
Nate McLouth, starting centerfielder
- A career-high 29 homers for 100 career homers
- A career-high 24 steals for 100 career SBs
Martin Prado, starting second baseman
- 40 doubles will give him a career total of 100 doubles
Troy Glaus, starting first baseman
- 25 doubles away from 300 career doubles
- Since he'll likely be batting cleanup, a monstrous, Comeback Player of the Year-worthy 121 RBI season will garner him his 1,000th career RBI
Eric Hinske, utility
- A double away from 200 career doubles
Melky Cabrera, outfielder
- 10 doubles away from 100 career doubles
- 29 walks away from 200 career BBs
- A career-high 14 homers will get him to 50 career HRs
David Ross, backup catcher
- 15 hits away from 300 total hits
- 26 RBI away from 200 career RBI
And last for the hitters, but most certainly not least, starting third baseman, Chipper Jones:
- 94 base hits will put Chipper Jones at 2,500 career hits (#2 Braves all-time, still 1,100 behind Hank Aaron)
- 55 RBI will put Chipper Jones at 1,500 career RBI (#2 Braves all-time, still 702 behind Hank Aaron)
- 42 times around the diamond puts Chipper Jones at 1,500 career runs (#2 Braves all-time, still 607 behind you guessed it,
Frank StalloneHank Aaron)
Jesse Chavez, relief
- 47 strikeouts will garner him his 100th career K
Eric O'Flaherty, LOOGY
- 15 punchouts will put O'Flaherty also at 100 career Ks
Peter Moylan, relief horse
- 13 more holds puts Moylan at 50 career holds
- 57 strikeouts gives him 200 Ks for his career
Takashi Saito, set-up, backup closer
- 19 saves, combined with his NPB career, will give Saito 150 career saves
Jair Jurrjens, starting pitcher
- A career-high 20 wins will give Jair 50 career victories
- A career-high 196 punchouts will put Jair at 500 strikeouts
- In 66.0 IP, Jair Jurrjens will have pitched in 500 career innings
Kenshin Kawakami, starting pitcher
- Including his NPB stats, Kawakami is 67 Ks away from 1,500 career strikeouts
- If he can play out of his head, and throw 211.1 IP, he will have a career total of 2,000 innings pitched in his career
Derek Lowe, starting pitcher
- 9 more wins will give Lowe a career total of 150 wins
- 114 strikeouts puts Lowe at a career total of 1,500 Ks
- Not a good one, but if he allows 90 more ERs, he has surrendered a career total of 1,000 ERs
Tim Hudson, starting pitcher
- 2 wins away from a career total of 150 wins as well
- 98 strikeouts away from 1,500 career punchouts
- If he can regain some dominance, then 3 more complete games will put Tim Hudson at a nice round 25 complete games pitched.
And the man who inspired me to write this, closer Billy Wagner:
- Wags currently sits at 385 career saves. So 15 saves puts him at a nice milestone 400, but he needs approximately 40 saves to pass the mark set by John Franco, as the most career saves pitched by a lefty.
"I have to have a special year to top Franco," he said. "I’m going out with the mindset of accomplishing that. If I get 40 saves, there is a great chance the Braves are going to the playoffs."
Gotta love Wags' fire. Also quoted was the realization that him turning down the Red Sox's $8M option, was because he didn't want to be Jonathan Papelbon's bridge, and to chase this statistical achievement. It's going to be a tough one, since no Braves reliever since John Smoltz has tossed over 40 saves. But we're all going to be rooting for him.
So yeah, the Braves milestones this year aren't exactly sexy or glamorous, especially on the hitters' side, but they're worth mentioning. The trifecta of pitchers hoping to get their 1,500th career strikeout will be fun one to watch, and none of Chipper Jones' milestones seems unreasonable by any stretch of the imagination, and serve nothing but further cement that he's still one of the greatest players to ever play the game. And it would be quite appropriate for Bobby Cox to witness all these milestones in his final year, to boot.
And in conclusion, one small question - would you think Bobby Cox getting ejected in his final game would be appropriate, or dreadful?
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nice info
andI think Bobby would have to murder someone to get ejected from his final game, so yes it would be dreadful
I’d like to see Chipper and Mac hold down Hohn while Bobby beats the crap out of him.
I can dream…
Viva los Bravos ~
by Chief Noc-A-Homa on Feb 22, 2010 11:47 AM EST up reply actions
This is cool.
Man I hope Chipper reaches 500 career homers.
The third-base umpire ran into the outfield and retrieved the biggest chunk. "It's a f***in' potato."
by alligatorimpersonator on Feb 22, 2010 12:12 PM EST reply actions
Doesn't
Bobby need 12 ejections to 162
by bravesforever16 on Feb 22, 2010 12:21 PM EST via mobile reply actions
That'd take a career year, even by his standards.
I’d put the over-under on Coxian ejections at 5.5. And I’d take the under. I have a hunch that he’ll be a bit mellower with the umps, especially toward the end of the year. But who knows.
"Yeah, and I have an enchanted jock strap." -- Karl Karlson
by Jacob Peterson on Feb 22, 2010 12:58 PM EST up reply actions
I was thinking about that. It would be awesome.
I guess it really depends how many times Angel Hernandez and Bill Hohn get the dish against us.
"If you were going to make a Mount Rushmore of managers, Bobby's one of them."
-Mike Scioscia
by The Keith Lockhart Era on Feb 23, 2010 9:09 AM EST up reply actions
How many teams
have had two starters reach 150 wins and 1500 Ks in the same year? That’d be interesting.
Looks like Chipper’s got some nice milestones to reach sometime this summer. Let’s hope he doesn’t start pressing like he did when he was about to hit his 400th HR.
"Yeah, and I have an enchanted jock strap." -- Karl Karlson
Chipper
Looking at all of Chipper’s 1st ballot HOF career numbers, the category in which he is highest on the all-time MLB leader board is base on balls. He is, incredibly, in the #32 position, behind only Sheffield (#19) and Thome (#10) among active players. His 58th BB of the 2010 season will be the 1403 of his career and move him past Hank Aaron’s career total and into the top 25.
He also needs only 34 BBs to reach 1377 and move past Eddie Matthews into the #1 position on the all-time Braves list. Aaron is #3 at 1297.
Finally, 28 doubles gets him to 500. At present only 50 players have ever accomplished that.
I don't think
that even the great Bobby Cox would want to be ejected in his last game. Being that game will be during the World Series and all.
Frank Stallone, greatest offensive force in Braves history.
"If you were going to make a Mount Rushmore of managers, Bobby's one of them."
-Mike Scioscia
by The Keith Lockhart Era on Feb 23, 2010 9:07 AM EST reply actions
So if you were winding down your career, quite possibly staring your last season in the eyes, and haven’t made it to the series yet, and had the option to rejoin a team who was a legit chance of making it there or going to your childhood favorite team so you can continue closing and chase a milestone what do you do?

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