gold star for USAHOF

234. Rudy York

Rudy York was best known for his time with the Detroit Tigers, where he had his greatest success.

York had a cup of coffee with Detroit in 1934, and he returned to stay in 1937, with a 35-home-run year, which would be a career high.  Eighteen of those taters took place in a month, breaking Babe Ruth’s record.  York continued to blast homers, winning the Home Run Title with 34 in 1943, while also leading the American League in Runs Batted In (118).  York finished third in MVP voting that year, and he had eight other seasons where he received an MVP vote.  

The seven-time All-Star also played for Boston, Chicago (AL), and Philadelphia (AL), and he had 277 career Home Runs.

23. Rudy York

While Rudy York had his most productive years in World War II he was still seven-time All-Star (thus reflecting that he was still a great player when MLB was stacked).  York would smack 20 Home Runs in seven consecutive seasons, including winning the Home Run Title in 1943.  That year, he also led the American League in Slugging Percentage and Runs Batted In and finished third in MVP voting.  With Detroit, he would smack 239 Home Runs with 1,317 Hits and a Slash Line of .282/.369/.503.