Today
on the blog we have a “not so missing” 1976 card for Mario Mendoza, he
of the unfairly tagged “Mendoza-Line” infamy for his light hitting:
Mendoza appeared in 56 games for the Pirates in 1975, hitting .180 with
nine hits over 50 at-bats while filling in at both shortstop and second
base.
He became the go-to reference for hitting under .200, and appeared in 50
games for the Pittsburgh Pirates during the 1976 season, and, you
guessed it, hit under .200 with a .185 figure based on his 17 hits over
92 at-bats.
Now granted, the man hit under the .200 threshold five times during his
career, but he did end up with a career .215 average by the time he
retired from Big League ball in 1982.
I guess you can say that in back-to-back seasons in 1980 and 1981 he was
positively raking when he hit .245 and .231 for the Seattle mariners
and Texas Rangers respectively.
Nevertheless, by the time he retired, he finished with 287 hits over
1337 at-bats spread out over 686 games between 1974 and 1982, good for
the .215 average, with 106 runs scored and 101 runs batted in.
Some say (and I agree), that it was unfair to make HIM the poster child
for the light-hitting set, and though I cannot at this very moment
remember many of the players, there are a handful that were actually
much worse at the plate than he, including who I consider the worst,
former catcher Bill Bergen, who hit .170 over eleven seasons between
1901 and 1911, and the guy pretty much played full time.