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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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List Of Major League Baseball Players With A .400 Batting Average In A Season

In baseball, batting average (AVG) is a measure of a batter's success rate in achieving a hit during an at bat, and is calculated by dividing a player's hits by his at bats. The achievement of a .400 batting average in a season is recognized as the coveted "standard of hitting excellence", in light of how batting .300 in a season is already regarded as solid. Forty-two players have recorded a batting average of at least .400 in a single Major League Baseball (MLB) season as of 2023,, but none have done so for more than 75 years. The last to do so were Bill Terry in the National League (1930), Ted Williams in the American League (1941), and Willard Brown and Artie Wilson in the Negro American League (1948). Five players – Ed Delahanty, Ty Cobb, Rogers Hornsby, Oscar Charleston, and Josh Gibson – have accomplished the feat in three different seasons, the highest batting average for a single season was .4711 single-season record established by Tetelo Vargas in 1943. Ross Barnes was the first player to bat .400 in a season, posting a .429 batting average in the National League's inaugural 1876 season.

In total, 42 players have reached the .400 mark in MLB history and nine have done so more than once. Of these, twenty one were right-handed batters, nineteen were left-handed, and two were switch hitter, meaning they could bat from either side of the plate. Three of these players (Terry, Leonard and Williams) played for only one major league team. The Philadelphia Phillies are the only franchise to have four players reach the milestone while on their roster: Delahanty, Billy Hamilton, Sam Thompson, and Tuck Turner, all of whom attained a batting average over .400 during the 1894 season. Three players won the Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award in the same year as their .400 season. Tip O'Neill, Nap Lajoie, Josh Gibson, Willie Wells, Mule Suttles, Oscar Charleston (3 times), Heavy Johnson and Rogers Hornsby (twice) also earned the Triple Crown alongside achieving a .400 batting average, leading their respective leagues in batting average, home runs and runs batted in (RBI). Although Ray Dandridge's .432 batting average in 1934 did not earn him the Negro National League's batting title, it established a major league record for a rookie that stands to this day. Fred Dunlap has the lowest career batting average among players who have batted .400 in a season with .292, while Cobb – with .366 – recorded the highest career average in major league history.

Given the decades that have elapsed since Brown and Wilson became the last players to achieve the feat and the integral changes to the way the game of baseball is played since then – such as the increased utilization of specialized relief pitchers – a writer for The Washington Post called the mark "both mystical and unattainable". Consequently, modern day attempts to reach the hallowed mark by Rod Carew (.388 in 1977), George Brett (.390 in 1980) and Tony Gwynn (.394 in the strike-shortened 1994 season) have generated considerable hype among fans and in the media. Of the thirty-four players eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame who have batted .400 in a season, twenty-four have been elected and two were elected on the first ballot. Players are eligible for the Hall of Fame if they have played in at least 10 MLB seasons, and have either been retired for five seasons or deceased for at least six months. These requirements leave seven players ineligible who did not play in at least 10 seasons. Shoeless Joe Jackson is ineligible for the Hall of Fame because he was permanently banned from baseball in 1921 for his involvement in the Black Sox Scandal.

Players

A man with dark hair in a dark baseball cap and a white baseball jersey with "CLEVELAND" on the chest.
Nap Lajoie is one of several players to earn the Triple Crown in addition to batting .400 in the same season.
A man, wearing a grey baseball cap, baseball jersey with "MICHIGAN" on the chest and dark baseball socks, sits on the floor with his legs crossed.
George Sisler achieved the .400 mark and won the MVP Award in 1922.
A man, wearing a white baseball uniform with the words "BOSTON" across his chest obscured, smiles towards the left.
Ted Williams is the last American League player to post a .400 batting average in a season, achieving the feat in 1941.
Key
Year The year of the player's .400 season
Player (X) Name of the player and number of .400 seasons they had at that point
Team The player's team for his .400 season
NL National League
AL American League
AA American Association
UA Union Association
NN2 Negro National League
ANL American Negro League
NAL Negro American League
ECL Eastern Colored League
AVG The player's batting average in that season
Career AVG The player's batting average in his MLB career
§ Denotes batting average that was part of a Triple Crown season
Elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame
MLB players who have batted .400 in a season
Year Player Team League AVG Career AVG Ref
1876 Ross Barnes Chicago White Stockings NL .429 .360
1884 Fred Dunlap St. Louis Maroons UA .412 .292
1887 Tip O'Neill St. Louis Browns AA .435 .326
1887 Pete Browning Louisville Colonels AA .402 .341
1894 Hugh Duffy Boston Beaneaters NL .440 .326
1894 Tuck Turner Philadelphia Phillies NL .418 .320
1894 Sam Thompson Philadelphia Phillies NL .415 .331
1894 Ed Delahanty Philadelphia Phillies NL .404 .346
1894 Billy Hamilton Philadelphia Phillies NL .403 .344
1895 Jesse Burkett Cleveland Spiders NL .405 .338
1895 Ed Delahanty (2) Philadelphia Phillies NL .404 .346
1896 Jesse Burkett (2) Cleveland Spiders NL .410 .338
1896 Hughie Jennings Baltimore Orioles NL .401 .312
1897 Willie Keeler Baltimore Orioles NL .424 .341
1899 Ed Delahanty (3) Philadelphia Phillies NL .410 .346
1901 Nap Lajoie Philadelphia Athletics AL .426 .338
1911 Ty Cobb Detroit Tigers AL .420 .366
1911 Shoeless Joe Jackson Cleveland Naps AL .408 .356
1912 Ty Cobb (2) Detroit Tigers AL .409 .366
1920 George Sisler St. Louis Browns AL .407 .340
1921 Oscar Charleston St. Louis Stars NNL .433 .364
1922 George Sisler (2) St. Louis Browns AL .420 .340
1922 Rogers Hornsby St. Louis Cardinals NL .401 .358
1922 Ty Cobb (3) Detroit Tigers AL .401 .366
1923 Biz Mackey Hilldale Club ECL .423 .328
1923 Harry Heilmann Detroit Tigers AL .403 .342
1924 Rogers Hornsby (2) St. Louis Cardinals NL .424 .358
1924 Oscar Charleston (2) Harrisburg Giants ECL .405 .364
1925 Oscar Charleston (3) Harrisburg Giants ECL .427 .364
1925 Rogers Hornsby (3) St. Louis Cardinals NL .403 .358
1926 Mule Suttles St. Louis Stars NNL .425 .340
1927 Red Parnell Birmingham Black Barons NNL .422 .328
1927 Jud Wilson Baltimore Black Sox ECL .422 .352
1929 Chino Smith New York Lincoln Giants ANL .451 .408
1930 Bill Terry New York Giants NL .401 .341
1934 Buddy Burbage Newark Dodgers NN2 .438 .300
1934 Ray Dandridge Newark Dodgers NN2 .432 .319
1941 Ted Williams Boston Red Sox AL .406 .344
1943 Tetelo Vargas New York Cubans NN2 .471 .356
1943 Josh Gibson(3) Homestead Grays NN2 .466 .374
1948 Willard Brown Kansas City Monarchs NAL .408 .351
1948 Artie Wilson Birmingham Black Barons NAL .435 .360

See also