
Ichiro Suzuki brings the sun, and the laughs, to highlight induction of Baseball Hall of Fame's 2025 class
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'Three thousand hits or 262 hits in one season are two achievements recognized by the writers. Well, all but one,' Suzuki said to roaring laughter.
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'By the way, the offer for the writer to have dinner at my home has now expired,' he added, with emphasis on 'expired' for good measure.
A pair of Era Committee selections rounded out the Class of 2025: Dave Parker, who earned the nickname Cobra during 20 big-league seasons, and slugger Dick Allen.
An estimated 30,000 fans crowded onto the field adjacent to the Clark Sports Center, sun umbrellas and Japanese flags sprinkled around. Suzuki's No. 51 was seemingly everywhere as fans, thousands of them Seattle Mariners boosters who made the trek from the Pacific Northwest, chanted 'Ichiro' several times throughout the day. A sign that read 'Thank You Ichiro! Forever a Legend' in English and Japanese summed up the admiration for Suzuki on his special day.
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With 52 returning Hall of Famers on hand, Suzuki paid homage to his new baseball home in Cooperstown and his adoring fans by delivering his 18-minute speech in English. His humor, a surprise to many, delighted the crowd.
He threw shade at the Miami Marlins, for whom he played three seasons before a final two-year return in Seattle.
'Honestly, when you guys offered me a contract in 2015, I had never heard of your team,' Suzuki joked.
He kidded that he showed up at spring training every year with his arm 'already in shape' just to hear Mariners broadcaster Rick Rizzs scream, '
He even took a moment for some tongue-in-cheek modesty.
'People often measure me by my records. Three thousand hits. Ten Gold Gloves. Ten seasons of 200 hits.
'Not bad, huh?' Suzuki said to more laughs.
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He thanked his late agent Tony Anastasio for 'getting me to America and for teaching me to love wine.'
But he also took time to get to the root of what made him extraordinary.
'Baseball is much more than just hitting, throwing, and running. Baseball taught me to make valued decisions about what is important. It helped shape my view of life and the world. … The older I got, I realized the only way I could get to play the game I loved to the age of 45 at the highest level was to dedicate myself to it completely,' he said. 'When fans use their precious time to see you play, you have a responsibility to perform for them whether you are winning by 10 or losing by 10.
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'Baseball taught me what it means to be a professional and I believe that is the main reason I am here today. I could not have achieved the numbers without paying attention to the small details every single day consistently for all 19 seasons.'
Now he's reached the pinnacle, overcoming doubters, one of whom said to him: ''Don't embarrass the nation.'' He's made his homeland proud.
'Going into America's Baseball Hall of Fame was never my goal. I didn't even know there was one. I visited Cooperstown for the first time in 2001, but being here today sure feels like a fantastic dream.'
Sabathia thanked 'the great players sitting behind me, even Ichiro, who stole my Rookie of the Year award [in 2001].' He paid homage to Parker and spoke about Black culture in today's game.
'It's an extra honor to be a part of Dave's Hall of Fame class. He was a father figure for a generation of Black stars. In the '80s and early '90s when I first started watching baseball and Dave Parker was crushing homers, the number of Black players in the major leagues was at its highest, about 18 percent. Me and my friends played the game because we saw those guys on TV and there was always somebody who looked like me in a baseball uniform.
'Baseball has always been a great game for Black athletes, but baseball culture has not always been great to Black people. I hope we're starting to turn that around. I don't want to be the final member of the Black aces, a Black pitcher to win 20 games. And I don't want to be the final Black pitcher giving a Hall of Fame speech.'
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Wagner urged young players to treat obstacles not as 'roadblocks, but steppingstones.'
'I wasn't the biggest player. I wasn't supposed to be here. There were only seven full-time relievers in the Hall of Fame. Now, there are eight because I refused to give up or give in,' he said.
Suzuki received 393 of 394 votes (99.7 percent) from the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Sabathia was picked on 342 ballots (86.8 percent) and Wagner on 325 (82.5 percent), which was 29 votes more than the 296 needed for the required 75 percent.
After arriving in the majors in 2001, Suzuki joined Fred Lynn (1975) as the only players to win Rookie of the Year and MVP in the same season.
Suzuki was a two-time AL batting champion and 10-time All-Star and Gold Glove outfielder, hitting .311 with 117 homers, 780 RBIs and 509 stolen bases with Seattle, the Yankees, and Miami.
He is perhaps the best contact hitter ever, with 1,278 hits in Nippon Professional Baseball and 3,089 in MLB, including a season-record 262 in 2004. His combined total of 4,367 exceeds
Sabathia was a six-time All-Star who won the 2007 AL Cy Young Award and a World Series title in 2009. He went 251-161 with a 3.74 ERA and 3,093 strikeouts, third among lefthanders behind Randy Johnson and Steve Carlton, during 19 seasons with Cleveland, Milwaukee, and the Yankees.
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A seven-time All-Star, Wagner was 47-40 with a 2.31 ERA and 422 saves for Houston, Philadelphia, the Mets, Red Sox, and Atlanta.
Tom Hamilton and Tom Boswell were also honored during Hall of Fame weekend. Hamilton has been the primary radio broadcaster for the Cleveland Guardians franchise for 35 seasons and received the Ford C. Frick Award. Boswell, a retired sports columnist who spent his entire career with The Washington Post, was honored with the BBWAA Career Excellence Award.
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Ichiro Suzuki was the king of poking singles into the outfield, but he may have hit it out of the park during his Hall of Fame induction speech on Sunday. Suzuki poked a bit of fun at the Marlins, who signed him to a contract in 2015 and for whom he played three seasons near the end of his storybook career. 'And to the Miami Marlins: I appreciate David Samson and Mike Hill for coming today. Honestly, when you guys called to offer me a contract for 2015, I had never heard of your team,' Ichiro joked to thunderous laughter from the Cooperstown crowd. 4 Ichiro Suzuki played 19 years in Major League Baseball. AP Suzuki, who was nearly a unanimous selection, delivered the speech in English after originally coming over from Japan, having not spoken the language much publicly. Suzuki didn't forget to mention his former Yankee teammates, although they were not on the butt-end of a joke as the Marlins were. 4 Ichiro Suzuki joked that he didn't know the Marlins were a team when he signed. Getty Images 4 Ichiro is joined by Billy Wager [left] and C.C. Sabathia [right] on the Hall of Fame induction stage. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post He added when discussing his three seasons with the Yankees from 2012-14 that he recognized that none of his former teammates were there for him. 'I know you guys are really here today for CC, but that's okay. He deserves your love,' Suzuki added. On the Yankees, Suzuki was no longer the superstar AL MVP candidate that he was with the Mariners, but still put up solid numbers. 4 Ichiro Suzuki speaks in Cooperstown for his Hall of Fame speech. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect He had a .322 average with the Yankees in 2012 after being traded to the squad before the trade deadline in exchange for two minor league pitchers, D.J. Mitchell and Danny Farquhar. The Yankees won 95 games in 2012 and wound up being swept by the Tigers in the American League Championship Series while Derek Jeter went down with a season-ending ankle injury in Game 1 of the series. Suzuki played 19 years in MLB; this also doesn't include the nine years he played in Japanese baseball for the Orix BlueWave.