A once-in-a-generation player who earned the admiration of baseball fans in North America -- the birthplace of the sport -- ...
Ichiro Suzuki is the Japanese Zen master who was so dedicated to baseball that he carried his bats in a moisture-proof case ...
This story was excerpted from Christina De Nicola’s Marlins Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And ...
In his first season in 2001, Ichiro earned the American League Most Valuable Player and Rookie of the Year awards, hitting ...
Ichiro began his MLB odyssey in 2001 with the Mariners, already a seasoned professional at the age of 27, and quickly became ...
Beyond all of his other gifts, it was that unparalleled ability to put the bat on the ball that stands out most to those who watched Ichiro -- or attempted to get him out. Mark Buehrle ...
No one has ever walked through these doors with the sport-changing, Hall-changing, planet-changing possibilities of Ichiro.
On April 2, 2001, Bret Boone jogged to second base for a chilly Opening Day in Seattle. The roof at Safeco Field was open, the upstart Oakland Athletics were in town, and ESPN2 had the national ...
Ichiro Suzuki's career was full of hitting streaks, All-Star Games and Gold Glove awards. But all that paled compared to ...
For Ichiro Suzuki, whose baseball career defied convention and shattered records, his induction into the Hall of Fame has ...
It's a foregone conclusion Seattle Mariners legend Ichiro Suzuki will go into the Hall of Fame. Shannon Drayer looks at how he got here.
324 with 320 hits in 987 at-bats. Melvin, now manager of the Giants, was one of four A’s managers Ichiro would face, with the others being Ken Macha, Bob Geren and Art Howe. Against the Giants ...