Ichiro Suzuki, like Hank Aaron and Tom Seaver before him, is giving his personal collection to the Baseball Hall of Fame.
In a rather slow winter for the Seattle Mariners, there was one piece of incredibly good news: Ichiro Suzuki earned election ...
planet-changing possibilities of Ichiro. As the first player elected from Japan, he enters the Hall as more than just a baseball player, more than just the transcontinental Hit King. He is ...
Baseball’s greatest mystery had trained since childhood for that moment. He alone understood just how prepared he was to meet it. But even Ichiro didn’t know his road from Japan to Seattle ...
Earlier this month, Ichiro was voted into the Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame, and he wasn't unanimous there either. He appeared on 323 of 349 ballots, or 92.6%. Ichiro is the first Asian player ...
Ichiro Suzuki became the first Japanese player to gain entry into the Baseball Hall of Fame — and yet the moment fell narrowly shy of even more history. Suzuki, a no-doubt, first-ballot Hall of ...
He came to Major League Baseball at 27 years old and finished with a remarkable 3,089 hits. Combine that with the 1,278 he had in Japan, and Ichiro stands as the career hits leader in professional ...
But more important is his role as a pioneer in Major League Baseball. Upon his arrival in our state in 2001, Ichiro became the first Japanese non-pitcher in the major leagues. Pitcher Masanori ...
SEATTLE -- For Ichiro Suzuki, whose baseball career defied convention ... Suzuki had accumulated 4,367 hits -- 3,089 in MLB ...
Ichiro Suzuki has made even more history. The all-time great became the first player from Japan to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame as part of the 2025 class. The all-time great was just ...
Ichiro made his debut with the Mariners in 2001, becoming the first Japanese position player to join Major League Baseball. That season he won both the American League MVP and Rookie of the Year ...
The National Baseball Hall of Fame will have three ... sport's highest honor Tuesday and are headed to Cooperstown. Ichiro is the first Japanese-born player to receive Hall of Fame honors.