As far as batting average goes that would be Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby who played with the Cardinals, Giants, Braves, Cubs, and Browns between 1915-1937. His career batting average was .358 and he is second all time in career batting average behind Ty Cobb.
Ted Williams had .420 under current batting average calculation rules in 1941, but officially he hit .406; the actual record belongs to Tip O'Neill, who hit .492 in 1887. If you discount 19th century players, the record is .424 by Rogers Hornsby.
Reggie Jackson had a career batting average of .262
No, Michael Anderson Drexels is the all time leading scorer, He holds the 7th highest career scoring average.
Derrek Lee of the Chicago Cubs won the batting title with a .335 average. It was the first time that a member of the Cubs had captured a batting title since Bill Buckner did it in 1980.
Your batting average would be .333
Grover Covington holds the record with 157 sacks. He played in the CFL for 10 years with the Hamilton Tiger Cats.
Stan The Man had a life-time batting average of .331
Average litter size is 1 to 3 cubs.
According to Baseball Reference, through games played on June 19, 2008 the National League batting average was .259 and the American League batting average was .263. The National All-time average is .260.
It is sir Donald Bradman.
2010 - Josh Hamilton of the Texas Rangers a batting average of .359
The highest batting average a player can have is 1.000, which would mean that he would have a hit every time he is at bat. Of course, this wouldn't count the times the batter may have been walked, since walks aren't considered "at-bats" and don't reflect upon his batting average.
As far as batting average goes that would be Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby who played with the Cardinals, Giants, Braves, Cubs, and Browns between 1915-1937. His career batting average was .358 and he is second all time in career batting average behind Ty Cobb.
Time for a Tiger was created in 1956.
She is 5th all-time at Purdue in the 5k with a 16:39.93 from the Auburn Tiger Invite in 2008.
Joe Jackson (Shoeless Joe) with a .340 batting average for the White Sox between 1915-1920.