I think he played on the same club as the famed double play combo
Hal & Al Eluia, the Cuban wonders. Their play brought great rejoicing to the fans.
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http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/bas...age=ootb080602Quote:
Katharine Sharp of ESPN research notes that Jay Bruce's 1.000 slugging percentage in his first six big league games is the second-highest of any player during the divisional era (since 1969). Only Mike Jacobs' 1.050 in 2005 was better. Bruce went 2-for-3 with his second career homer and sure looks the real deal, doesn't he?
I'd argue his OBP is even more impressive than his slugging %.
I got this from Sean Foreman (President, Baseball Reference) in an email yesterday:
What Foreman is saying is that if Bruce's career batting average never dips below .300, he'd be the first player to accomplish that in over 50 years, perhaps the first player to ever accomplish that.Quote:
How about Jay Bruce?! By my count, he could be the first player I've found who had more than 100 AB's and had a .300 BA or higher for the entirety of his career (first AB to last). My search only goes back to 1956, though.
Today's Jay Bruce Notes from the Reds:
Last night Jay Bruce homered for the third consecutive game...he became the second player this season under the age of 22 to homer in 3 straight games...Ari's Justin Upton did it in April...this is only the fourth time in Major League history that 2 players, both under the age of 22, homered in 3 straight team games...it also happened in 1929 (Mel Ott & Jimmie Foxx), 1959 (Orlando Cepeda & Willie McCovey) and 2001 (Albert Pujols & Adam Dunn)...courtesy Elias Sports Bureau.
A Week To Remember: Last night Jay Bruce ended his first week in the Major Leagues with 15 hits and 3 homers...the only player in Major League history in the last 80 years to have produced that many hits and home runs a week into his career was Mitchell Page for the 1977 Athletics (3hr, 16h)...courtesy Elias Sports Bureau.
http://beta.cincinnati.com/apps/pbcs...cincinnati.com