Sunday, April 9, 2023

EXPANDED LEAGUE-LEADERS: 1979 A.L. RBI's

Welcome again folks!

Today on the blog we celebrate the top three RBI men of the American League in 1978 with a 1979 "expanded league leader" card in my long-running thread that's about to wrap up in a few weeks:
 

Of course, if we're talking 1978 in the American League then it is ALL about the great Jim Rice, who would take home an MVP Award for his tremendous season that year.
Rice led the league with his 139 RBIs, while virtually leading the league in everything else, including hits, triples, homers, slugging and total bases.
An absolute beast at the plate that year, while also putting together arguably the best three-year run between 1977 and 1979 of the era.
In second place with 121 RBIs, Detroit Tigers DH/OF Rusty Staub, who can easily be argued to be a Hall of Famer himself.
Staub had one of the best seasons of his illustrious career that year, hitting .273 with 24 homers, 175 hits and those 121 RBI's, finishing fifth in the MVP race at season's end.
In his three full season's in Detroit he definitely earned his stripes, driving in no less that 96 runs while collecting 176, 173 and 175 hits successively. Not too shabby!
In third place with 115 RBIs, the player who actually led the A.L. in RBIs the previous season, Larry Hisle, who had a great first year with his new team, the Milwaukee Brewers, after coming over from the Minnesota Twins.
Hisle made an immediate impact with Milwaukee in 1978, hitting .290 with 34 homers, 96 runs scored and his 115 RBIs, giving the Brewers an explosive bat to go along with young players such as Robin Yount and Paul Molitor, while finishing third in the MVP voting that year.
Sadly however, in 1979 he'd seriously hurt his shoulder, curtailing a fine career, resulting in his retirement just four seasons later, never playing in more than 27 games in any of those campaigns, done at 35.

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