Rickey Henderson got on base a lot more, hit for more power, and was a better fielder for most of his career. Brock was very good, but Henderson was one of the greatest players of all time.
Rickey Henderson is the all-time MLB stolen base leader, with 1,406. Lou Brock is second with 938.
Rickey Henderson finished his career with 1,406 stolen bases almost a good 500 more then 2nd place (Lou Brock 938).
In 1982 Rickey Henderson set the single season steals record at 130 for the modern ball era, besting Lou Brock's previous record of 118. During his record breaking season he stole home not once, but twice!
Rickey Henderson is MLB's all time stolen base leader with 1406. Lou Brock is second with 938.
Rickey Henderson is MLB's all time stolen base leader with 1406.
Rickey Henderson is the all-time MLB stolen base leader, with 1,406. Lou Brock is second with 938.
Lou Brock-938 Rickey Henderson-1406
Rickey Henderson, by far. He had 1,406 stolen bases. The next closest was Lou Brock with 938.
Rickey Henderson finished his career with 1,406 stolen bases almost a good 500 more then 2nd place (Lou Brock 938).
In 1982 Rickey Henderson set the single season steals record at 130 for the modern ball era, besting Lou Brock's previous record of 118. During his record breaking season he stole home not once, but twice!
No doubt Rickey Henderson. He has 1,406 swipes, 468 more than the next most, Lou Brock (938). Rickey also broke Brock's record of most in a season with 130 in 1982, 12 more than Brock's 118 in 1974. That is why both are in the Hall of Fame
Rickey Henderson is MLB's all time stolen base leader with 1406. Lou Brock is second with 938.
Rickey Henderson is MLB's all time stolen base leader with 1406.
That would be Rickey Henderson with 130 stolen bases in 1982. The record for most stolen bases in a single MLB season is held by Hugh Nicol of the Cincinnati Red Stockings of the American Association who stole 138 bases in 1887. As far as modern day baseball is concerned, Rickey Henderson has the most stolen bases in a single season and Lou Brock of the 1974 St. Louis Cardinals has the second most with 118.
The value of multi signed baseballs cannot be priced by the value of each signature added up. Multi signed baseballs are valued as a group of signatures, and how desired that group is as a whole. This does not necessarily mean that two signatures will sell for less than one, but in most cases it does, or at least not the full value of the two signatures added up. A Rickey Henderson single signed baseball is worth about $75.-$100. A Lou Brock single signed baseball is worth about $50.-$85. This stolen base leaders signed baseball would be a desired pair of signatures. a Rickey Henderson Lou Brock dual signed baseball should sell in the $75. -$150. price range. Value is based on average prices of recently closed auctions. Prices may vary based on condition, and the type of authenticity that accompanies the baseball. Signatures that have not been properly authenticated could sell at half the market value or less. Add for inscriptions.
Lou Brock stole 938 bases in his 19 year career. He played for the Chicago Cubs and the St. Louis Cardinals. He led the league eight times in stolen bases and had 118 steals in 1974 for the Cardinals. The only other player who has more steals than him is Rickey Henderson with 1406.
Rickey Henderson. The only player in MLB history to have at least 1000 career stolen bases in Henderson with 1,406. The four players closet to him is Lou Brock (938), Billy Hamilton (937), Ty Cobb (892) and Tim Raines (808)