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Ted Williams is the last player in Major League Baseball to hit .400, a feat he accomplished in 1941 with a .406 batting average. Fast forward to 2025, and Aaron Judge, with his scorching .423 ...
In 1941, the year Ted Williams batted .406, Williams had an Adjusted OPS+ of 235," Olney wrote. Williams played 19 seasons in the MLB from 1939 to 1960, with three years off for military service.
Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees rounds the bases on his solo home run to tie the game in the ninth inning against the Boston Red Sox. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST Ted Williams had a legendary ...
Aaron Judge keeps breaking barriers in MLB, matching a record set by Ted Williams 77 years ago with the Red Sox. ... That the name Ted Williams resurfaces alongside Judge is no coincidence.
No player has hit .400 for an entire season since Ted Williams hit .406 in 1941. Others have tried, but they have all failed. Tony Gwynn hit .394 in 1994 before the strike shortened the season ...
Aaron Judge has 88 hits and 41 walks through his first 60 games this season. The last MLB player to reach those marks through 60 games of a campaign was Ted Williams in 1948 (91, 64)!
Yankees superstar Aaron Judge is in a home run flurry that has rarely been seen in MLB history. Through his age-29 season, he ...
Though they lost, the Yankees got another solid night from superstar Aaron Judge. He went 2-for-5 with an RBI in the contest, and his average now sits at .405 through the first 29 games of the season.