In 1968, Carl Yastrzemski led the American League with a .301 average.
1900
Up through the 2011 All-Star break, 114 ... 52 in the National League and 62 in the American League. Teams: The Philadelphia Phillies lead the National League with 11 and the Seattle Mariners lead the American League with 9. Pitchers: James Shields of the Tampa Bay Rays leads the American League with 7 and Roy Halladay of the Philadelphia Phillies leads the National League with 6.
The two groups that fought in the peloponnesian war are Athenian Empire (Delian League), lead by Athens and Peloponnesian League, which is lead by Sparta eventually, Sparta won the war
Plate appearances with 739 and base hits with 219.
Through the 2008 season, that has happened twice:1) Bill Bradley, Philadelphia Eagles - led the NFL with 11 INTs in 1971 and 9 INTs in 1972.2) Everson Walls, Dallas Cowboys - led the NFL with 11 INTs in 1981 and 7 INTs in 1982.
no he is a quarterback dum butt
In 1968, Carl Yastrzemski led the American League with a .301 average.
That was Audray McMillan who was tied with Henry Jones of the Bills with 8 INTs in 1991.
The Devils led the league in scoring in 2000-2001.
I don't think a catcher has ever led the league in hits. It's rare for a catcher to lead the league in batting average, but even those who did so (Joe Mauer three times; Ernie Lombardi) did not play enough games to also lead all players in hits for that season.
No. Orr was never in the top 5 penalty minutes leaders in any NHL season he played.
No ATLANTA Brave has ever ended the season as the stolen base leader. Bill Bruton of the BOSTON Braves did in 1955.
Asante Samuel had 10 interceptions for 120 return yards in the 2006 season. He tied with Champ Bailey for the NFL lead in INTs for the season.
life
Paul Molitor of the Minnesota Twins turned 40 years old in the 1996 season when he led the American League with 225 base hits. Molitor was born August 22, 1956.
No rookie starting quarterback has ever taken their team to the Super Bowl. Four rookie quarterbacks have made the Championship game (Joe Flacco, Ben Roethlisberger, Mark Sanchez, Shaun King) but all have failed to lead their respective teams to the NFL's promised land.