"}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Has anyone ever hit 4000 hits?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Pete Rose holds the Major League record for most career hits, with 4,256. Rose and Ty Cobb, second most, are the only players with 4,000 or more career hits."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Who was the last player to hit 3000 hits?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Biggio and Jeter are the only players whose 3,000th hit came in a game where they had five hits; Jeter reached base safely in all of his at bats. The most recent player to reach 3,000 hits is Cabrera, who did so on April 23, 2022, while playing for the Detroit Tigers."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Who is the youngest player to reach 3000 hits?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"1921 — Detroit's Ty Cobb got his 3,000th career hit at age 34, the youngest player to reach that plateau. The milestone hit was a single off Elmer Myers of the Boston Red Sox."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Has anyone hit 500 home runs?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Throughout MLB history, there have only been 28 players who joined the 500 home run club (as of 2021). On August 11, 1929, Babe Ruth became the charter member of the club. It would be 11 years before a second player accomplished the feat. 11 of the 28 players hit their 500th homer in the 2000s."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Who is the youngest player to hit 700 home runs?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Babe Ruth is the youngest player in history to hit 700 home runs; he did so at the age of 39 years, 156 days old. The Babe is also the youngest player in American League history to hit 700 homers."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Is Albert Pujols retired?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"When it came to double plays, The Machine was ... a machine. Over his 22-year career Pujols dribbled, bounded, grounded and plastered his way to a mind-boggling 426 career double plays. He retired with a commanding 73 double-play lead over his closest competition, fellow Cooperstown-bound batsman Miguel Cabrera."}}]}}

As he closes in on 3,000 hits, Albert Pujols is still putting in the work, on and off the field (2024)

This is baseball’s rarified air, its Mt. Olympus. Here players are so renowned they go by single names – Babe, Hank, Willie – and their accomplishments are sporting legend. Invitations are not issued, but earned.

Almost 20,000 players have participated in Major League Baseball and only a precious few can be considered with the greatest of all time, an upper echelon that makes room for the Angels’ Albert Pujols.

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After hitting his 619thcareer home runWednesday, he now sits at 2,994 hits. He is poised to become only the fourth player in baseball history with at least 600 homers and 3,000 hits, joining Hank Aaron, Willie Mays and Alex Rodriguez.

“It seems like every time he gets a double or a home run or an RBI, you see one of the all-time greats flash on the board that he’s passed,” said Angels manager Mike Scioscia. “It gives perspective on how good Albert’s been and how good he is right now. It’s fun to watch.”

Now 38 years old, the designated hitter/first baseman’s annual production has declined; he is no longer the player who arrived with the Cardinals in 2001 and finished in the top five in NL MVP voting in 10 of his 11 seasons, winning it three times. But even a diminished Pujols remains productive. He has started this season with five home runs and 14 RBI and continues to bat cleanup for the Angels.

“This is one of the greatest run producers of our generation,” said Angels general manager Billy Eppler. “I don’t know any comment that could be better than that.”

In St. Louis he was beloved, a product of the Cards system skyrocketing to superstardom. In Orange County, it feels closer to respect and admiration. He can appear very serious, his focus legendary. At 6-foot-3 and 240 pounds, he remains physically imposing, and whether by intent or not, he can be intimidating.

He still moves into that distinct crouch for his stance, steely eyed on the pitcher and all concentration. He is that rare hitter who can be patient enough to spray line drives but still tap into his enormous raw power.

The Giants’ Bruce Bochy has been managing against Pujols since he first arrived on the major league scene as the NL Rookie of the Year with the Cardinals.Eighteen years later, Pujols remains a problem for Bochy, last week hitting agame-winning two-run homer against San Francisco.

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“When I first saw him, he was just so strong,” Bochy said. “But a simple swing with power to all fields. Pretty amazing that ball he hit yesterday. At his age, he can still drive the ball.

“He’s one of those guys, it seems like he’s coming up every inning because you were thinking about him all the time.”

If “The Machine” appears stern on the field, in the dugout he can be seen breaking into wide grins while interacting with teammates. When he plays the field, he often engages with players who reach first base.

And even during pregame around the batting cages, opposing players frequently surround the barrel-chested Pujols. Jose Mota is a former major leaguer whose father, Manny Mota, was a legendary pinch hitter for the Dodgers, and like Pujols, born in the Dominican Republic. José Mota now serves as an Angels broadcaster, but has known Pujols since his rookie season when Mota was working for the Fox Spanish-language telecasts.

“When visiting teams come in and Albert is around the cage, watch where they gravitate,” Mota said. “There’s always that connection from the past or something he might have done for them charity-wise that they go, ‘Albert’s here. Let’s go see Albert.’”

Indeed, Pujols is that rare player whose accomplishments off the field almost match those on it. He and his wife, Dee Dee (Deidre), started the Pujols Family Foundation in 2003. It focuses on children with Down syndrome and helping impoverished families in the Dominican Republic. When Pujols married Dee Dee in 2000, she had a daughter with Down syndrome.

That constant outreach partially explains why he was cherished in St. Louis.

“He was revered here,” said Rick Hummel, who has covered the Cardinals for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch for 42 years. “The Pujols Foundation has always been a big part of his life. He’s done tremendous work for that organization.

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“It seems he would always hit a home run on Buddy Walk Day. The Down syndrome kids would come to the ballpark and he would promise them a home run, and he’d hit it. He might hit two. He rarely ever missed.”

Said Mota: “When I see him around Down syndrome kids? Oh, my god, he melts. When I see him around his own kids, around his wife, with his teammates interacting – he’s not that stoic view that you see on the field. He’s fun.”

Said Scioscia: “I don’t know if people get a chance to see how much he and Dee Dee do on the human side. They’re tireless fundraisers. They help out in so many ways. It’s inspiring to see what they do off the field.”

On the field he continues to rack up milestones. He currently has 1,932 RBI (ninth all time) and has a chance to reach the 2,000 mark this season. That’s been done by only three players in baseball history – Babe Ruth, Aaron and Rodriguez.

“He’s set a standard that may never be set again,” Mota said. “But because of those standards, he expects more of himself. Albert is not sitting on the glory of, ‘I’m about to get 3,000 hits. I’ve hit 600 home runs.’ He wants to see howtonighthe can beat that pitcher.

“Superstars, they’re proud people. He’s a very humble guy, but those guys became superstars because in their mind there was only one thing they were thinking of – Best at what I do. And whatever it’s going to take workwise, I’m going to do it. And that’s your standard.”

Pujols does not grant the Anaheim media many interviews and he does not talk about records until they happen, so it can be difficult to gauge how important the swelling list of records is to him. Those who know him best, however, say he is keenly aware of his place in history and the records do mean something to him.

“I’m sure they do,” Hummel said. “What strikes me the most about all this is, he was very aware of baseball history. Especially history in St. Louis. He and (Stan) Musial became pretty close before Stan died.

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“We’re at the funeral parlor, Albert and I must have spent an hour talking to each other just about Stan and everything else. He knew all about Stan and what Stan had meant to the Cardinals and the community. He was just happy to be mentioned in the same sentence with Stan.”

Eppler is less certain, though he does have a theory.

“My hypothesis is that he looks at this as a job,” Eppler said. “When his car pulls into the parking lot, he starts work. When he leaves the parking lot, he’s done with work for the day. I think when he looks back on his career, that’s when he’ll understand and realize his impact. Right now, I think he’s a day-to-day, blue-collar player.”

Hummel can think back to a moment that let him know Pujols was aware of his numbers, and what people were saying about them.

“One time early in the season I said on a radio show he was hitting a light .320 or whatever,” Hummel said. “At the point he had very few extra-base hits. It kind of stuck in his craw and he brought it up again … at the announcement when he won the MVP.”

These days, with his advancing years and battles with plantar fasciitis, he is not even close to being the best player on his own team. That honor belongs to Mike Trout, generally viewed as baseball’s best player. Pujols slipped further away from the media glare on the Angels with the arrival this season of two-way Japanese sensation Shohei Ohtani.

Still, on he goes. He has three more years left on his 10-year, $240-million contract. A contract that provides a $3 million bonus for reaching 3,000 hits.

The years and the numbers fly by, Pujols still working, still undergoing the same daily routine, the same constant preparation. Still climbing to rarified heights.

“This guy has a passion to do the right things,” Mota said. “That’s the one thing about Albert since I met him. This is before he was a superstar, when he barely made that team out of spring training because of an injury. Albert is 100 percent on everything – taking ground balls, exercising, his time in the cage, being a dad. If it’s charity, it’s 100 percent to that.

“His focus is unmatched.”

(Top photo of Pujols: Erik Williams-USA TODAY Sports)

As he closes in on 3,000 hits, Albert Pujols is still putting in the work, on and off the field (2024)

FAQs

Who has 3,000 hits and is not in the Hall of Fame? ›

Of the 30 players in the 3,000-hit club who have reached Hall of Fame eligibility, 27 have been voted in. The three who have not – Pete Rose, Rafael Palmeiro and Alex Rodriguez – have been tied to either gambling or steroid controversies.

What is Albert Pujols doing now? ›

After a storied MLB career, future Hall of Famer Albert Pujols has begun his next chapter. Pujols will manage the Leones del Escogido of the Dominican Professional Baseball League in the 2024-25 season, the club announced Thursday afternoon.

Who has 500 HR and 3000 hits? ›

Palmeiro, who also hit 569 home runs in his career, is one of seven players with both 3,000 hits and 500 homers, along with Miguel Cabrera, Albert Pujols, A-Rod, Eddie Murray, Willie Mays and Hank Aaron.

Does anyone have 3,000 hits and 700 home runs? ›

It was Pujols' 700th career home run. Pujols joins Barry Bonds, Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron as the only players to hit 700 home runs or more in their careers. Pujols is also the second player in MLB history to join the 3,000-hit and 700-home run club, along with Aaron.

Who is the only Hall of Fame pitcher to never give up a Grand Slam? ›

When Palmer earned the win in Game 3 of the 1983 World Series against the Phillies, he became the first pitcher in major league history to win a World Series game in three different decades. He also threw a no-hitter against Oakland in 1969 and, remarkably, never surrendered a grand slam in his entire career.

Who is the best pitcher not in the Hall of Fame? ›

Aside from Clemens, Schilling and any active pitcher, Rick Reuschel is the top non-HOF pitcher in JAWS.

What is Albert Pujols annual salary? ›

2012-2021 Free Agent

Albert Pujols signed a 10 year , $240,000,000 contract with the Los Angeles Angels, including $240,000,000 guaranteed, and an average annual salary of $24,000,000.

What does Albert Pujols do outside of baseball? ›

After retiring at the end of the 2022 season, former St. Louis Cardinals, Los Angeles Angels and Los Angeles Dodgers legend Albert Pujols has a new job as a Special Assistant to the Commissioner.

Who is Albert Pujols' son? ›

Has anyone ever hit 4000 hits? ›

Pete Rose holds the Major League record for most career hits, with 4,256. Rose and Ty Cobb, second most, are the only players with 4,000 or more career hits.

Who was the last player to hit 3000 hits? ›

Biggio and Jeter are the only players whose 3,000th hit came in a game where they had five hits; Jeter reached base safely in all of his at bats. The most recent player to reach 3,000 hits is Cabrera, who did so on April 23, 2022, while playing for the Detroit Tigers.

Who is the youngest player to reach 3000 hits? ›

1921 — Detroit's Ty Cobb got his 3,000th career hit at age 34, the youngest player to reach that plateau. The milestone hit was a single off Elmer Myers of the Boston Red Sox.

Has anyone hit 500 home runs? ›

Throughout MLB history, there have only been 28 players who joined the 500 home run club (as of 2021). On August 11, 1929, Babe Ruth became the charter member of the club. It would be 11 years before a second player accomplished the feat. 11 of the 28 players hit their 500th homer in the 2000s.

Who is the youngest player to hit 700 home runs? ›

Babe Ruth is the youngest player in history to hit 700 home runs; he did so at the age of 39 years, 156 days old. The Babe is also the youngest player in American League history to hit 700 homers.

Is Albert Pujols retired? ›

When it came to double plays, The Machine was ... a machine. Over his 22-year career Pujols dribbled, bounded, grounded and plastered his way to a mind-boggling 426 career double plays. He retired with a commanding 73 double-play lead over his closest competition, fellow Cooperstown-bound batsman Miguel Cabrera.

Who has the most batting titles not in the Hall of Fame? ›

Madlock's four batting titles is the most of any player in major league baseball history who is not enshrined in the Hall of Fame.

Who has 500 home runs and not in Hall of Fame? ›

Barry Bonds has not been inducted into the Hall of Fame with 500+ home runs.
NAMEHRIBB
Mark McGwire583150
Rafael Palmeiro569172
Gary Sheffield509130
Sammy Sosa609154
5 more rows

Who has the most hits not in the Baseball Hall of Fame? ›

The 20 players with the most hits who aren't in the Hall of Fame
  1. Pete Rose — 4,256. (Malcolm Emmons-USA TODAY Network) ...
  2. Albert Pujols — 3,301* (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) ...
  3. Adrian Beltre — 3,166. (Getty Images) ...
  4. Alex Rodriguez — 3,115. ...
  5. Ichiro — 3,089. ...
  6. Rafael Palmeiro — 3,020. ...
  7. Miguel Cabrera — 2,987* ...
  8. Barry Bonds — 2,935.
Jan 24, 2022

Why is Manny Ramirez not in the Hall of Fame? ›

While his 12 All-Star appearances and 555 home runs (236 of them with Cleveland) would ordinarily make him a shoe-in, his candidacy has failed to gain traction thanks to a pair of confirmed positive tests for performance-enhancing drugs during his career.

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