The 25 best offensive seasons in Cleveland Indians history
By Zack Meisel Apr 3, 2020 28
When aiming to identify the golden standard for offensive seasons in Indians history, look no further than Jamie Quirk’s flawless 1984 performance.
His OPS for the Indians that year? A cool 5.000.
Granted, he only recorded one plate appearance. He hit a home run. That’s good for a 1.000 batting average, a 1.000 on-base percentage and a 4.000 slugging percentage. He essentially walked into a bustling casino, pulled $100 from his pocket, wagered it on one hand, hit blackjack and left.
Despite his gaudy statistics, Quirk’s season can’t actually qualify for the title of greatest in team history. There needs to be some quantity to support that quality.
We’re sifting through 120 years of Indians baseball to find the 25 best player seasons. That will surely leave some snubs.
For example: Albert Belle’s 1996 campaign, when he posted a .311/.410/.623 slash line and hit 48 homers and 38 doubles? Yeah, that didn’t make the cut.
Some of the old-timers’ efforts make this task exponentially difficult. Tris Speaker, Earl Averill, Shoeless Joe Jackson and others had some sterling seasons in a bygone era. Speaker and Jackson own the top six spots on the club’s on-base percentage leaderboard. Then again, the ‘90s sluggers produced a ton of showy statistics as well. Ramirez, Jim Thome and Albert Belle occupy the top six spots on the team’s single-season home run leaderboard.
A couple of guidelines:
1. Everything’s relative. The era matters. No one swung for the fences until Babe Ruth barged into the big leagues, so, no, Nap Lajoie’s home run totals aren’t going to mirror Travis Hafner’s power displays. We’ll use OPS+ and wRC+ on occasion to assess how players compared to their peers during their particular season.
2. The more games, the better. Belle’s 1994 season would have soared toward the top of this list had a players strike not limited him to 106 games. It’s not his fault, and some of those numbers sparkle more than the ones he registered the following year, but it’s a necessary step to take to maintain an even playing field in this exercise.
3. This caused plenty of brain pain to assemble. Feel free to list your own rankings in the comments. No hard feelings.
But first, some of the worst
John Gochnaur, 1902: .185/.247/.237 slash line, zero homers in 459 at-bats, 37 OPS+ (he followed up this season with a .185/.265/.240 clip in 1903)
Bill Wambsganss, 1915: .195/.272/.227, zero homers in 375 at-bats, 49 OPS+
Steve O’Neill, 1917: .184/.272/.222, zero homers in 370 at-bats, 47 OPS+
Tom Veryzer, 1979: .220/.279/.254, zero homers in 449 at-bats, 46 OPS+
Einar Diaz, 2002: .206/.258/.294, 47 OPS+
Brandon Phillips, 2003: .208/.242/.311, 48 OPS+
Luis Valbuena, 2010: .193/.273/.258, 50 OPS+
Honorable mention
George Burns, 1926: .358/.394/.494, led the league with 216 hits and 64 doubles (a franchise record), won the MVP award
Ed Morgan, 1930: .349/.413/.601, 84 extra-base hits, 136 RBIs
Earl Averill, 1931: .333/.404/.576, 36 doubles, 32 homers
Earl Averill, 1934: .313/.414/.569, 48 doubles, 31 homers
Joe Vosmik, 1935: .348/.408/.537, led the league with 216 hits, 47 doubles and 20 triples
Jeff Heath, 1941: .340/.396/.586, 32 doubles, 20 triples, 24 homers, 123 RBIs
Albert Belle, 1996: .311/.410/.623, 48 homers, 38 doubles, 99 walks to 87 strikeouts
Roberto Alomar, 2001: .336/.415/.541, 34 doubles, 20 homers, 12 triples, 30 stolen bases (his 1999 season is right on par with this one, too)
Jim Thome, 2001: .291/.416/.624, 49 homers, 26 doubles, 111 walks
25. Joe Sewell, 1923
Slash line: .353/.456/.479 (146 OPS+)
Notable: 41 doubles, fourth in MVP voting, 98 walks and only 12 strikeouts
Eight hitters drew 98 or more walks in 2019. They averaged 136 strikeouts, 11.5 times Sewell’s total in 1923.
24. Tito Francona, 1959
Slash line: .363/.414/.566 (171 OPS+)
Notable: Hit 20 homers and only struck out 42 times but was limited to 122 games
Francona finished fifth in the MVP balloting. Compare his slash line to his career clip: .272/.343/.403.
23. Kenny Lofton, 1994
Slash line: .349/.412/.536 (145 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league with 160 hits and 60 stolen bases, fourth in the MVP voting
The base-stealing gives Lofton a boost here and imagine his totals had a players strike not cost him the final 49 games of the season.
22. Jim Thome, 1996
Slash line: .311/.450/.612 (167 OPS+)
Notable: 38 homers, 116 RBIs, 122 runs scored, 123 walks
Incredibly, Thome spent the first half of the season in the lower part of Mike Hargrove’s batting order. (He batted eighth in 12 games!)
21. Hal Trosky, 1936
Slash line: .343/.382/.644 (146 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league with 162 RBIs, franchise-record 405 total bases, 96 extra-base hits
Trosky became the first player in team history to record 40+ homers and doubles in a season, a club no other Indians hitter would join until 1995. His 42 homers remained the franchise record until 1953.
Manny Ramirez routinely produced at the plate for the Indians, even with his jersey untucked. (Getty Images)
20. Manny Ramirez, 2000
Slash line: .351/.457/.697 (186 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in slugging and OPS, totaled 38 homers and 34 doubles and created runs at a weighted rate 81 percent better than the league average (wRC+)
Ramirez clobbered every pitch in sight during his final season in Cleveland, though he was limited to 118 games, which costs him at least a few spots on this list. No worries, though, this won’t be his only entry.
19. Albert Belle, 1994
Slash line: .357/.438/.714 (194 OPS+)
Notable: Hit 36 homers and 35 doubles and scored 90 runs, ranked in the top three in the AL in batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, hits, homers and RBIs
This season would challenge for the top spot if not for the strike; Belle appeared in only 106 games. Otherwise, he might have had back-to-back 50/50 seasons. He finished third in the MVP voting.
18. Earl Averill, 1936
Slash line: .378/.438/.627 (157 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league with 232 hits and 15 triples, hit 28 homers and 39 doubles, finished third in the MVP voting
His hit total ranks second in franchise history, one behind the record — we’ll get to that in a bit.
17. Tris Speaker, 1925
Slash line: .389/.479/.578 (166 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in on-base percentage, ranked third in the majors in batting average, behind Rogers Hornsby (.403) and Harry Heilmann (.393)
Speaker tallied as many home runs (12) as strikeouts. He had better seasons than this. A bunch of them.
16. Rocky Colavito, 1958
Slash line: .303/.405/.620 (180 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in slugging percentage, clubbed 41 homers, tallied 84 walks and 89 strikeouts
Colavito finished third in the MVP voting and fourth the following year. And then, in April 1960, the Indians traded him to Detroit.
15. Shoeless Joe Jackson, 1913
Slash line: .373/.460/.551 (192 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in slugging, OPS, hits (197) and doubles (39), stole 35 bases
The third of Jackson’s unparalleled three-year stretch in Cleveland. His 1914 season was exceptional, too, though not quite up to the standard he had set.
14. Tris Speaker, 1920
Slash line: .388/.483/.562 (172 OPS+)
Notable: Racked up 214 hits, led the league with 50 doubles
Speaker spurred the Indians to 98 wins and the franchise’s first championship.
13. Travis Hafner, 2006
Slash line: .308/.439/.659 (181 OPS+)
Notable: Hit 42 homers and 31 doubles, drew 100 walks and led the league in slugging percentage and OPS
This is one of the more overlooked seasons because the Indians underperformed and Hafner missed the final month because of a broken hand.
12. Tris Speaker, 1922
Slash line: .378/.474/.606 (177 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in on-base percentage and doubles (48)
Speaker struck out only 11 times in 518 plate appearances.
11. Lou Boudreau, 1948
Slash line: .355/.453/.534 (165 OPS+)
Notable: 98 walks and only nine strikeouts (N-I-N-E strikeouts in 676 plate appearances), career highs of 18 homers, 106 RBIs and 116 runs scored, won the MVP award
Just for good measure, Boudreau also served as the Indians’ manager in 1948 and led the club to its most recent World Series triumph.
10. Nap Lajoie, 1910
Slash line: .383/.444/.514 (197 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in hits (227), batting average and doubles (51)
That single-season hit total ranks third in team history.
9. Al Rosen, 1953
Slash line: .336/.422/.613 (180 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league with 43 homers and 145 RBIs and in slugging percentage and OPS
Rosen is the most recent Indians player to capture the MVP award.
8. Manny Ramirez, 1999
Slash line: .333/.442/.663 (174 OPS+)
Notable: Hit 44 homers and 34 doubles and led the league with 165 RBIs, which stands as the franchise record
Ramirez was an imposing force in the league’s best lineup, the only team after 1950 to score 1,000 runs in a season.
7. Nap Lajoie, 1904
Slash line: .376/.413/.546 (203 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, doubles (49) and hits (208)
Lajoie posted a 196 wRC+ in 1904, which remains the franchise record.
Jim Thome is the Indians’ all-time home run leader. (Tommy Gilligan / USA Today)
6. Jim Thome, 2002
Slash line: .304/.445/.677 (197 OPS+)
Notable: Franchise-record 52 homers, led the league in slugging percentage, walks and OPS and led all non-Barry Bonds humans in wRC+ (189)
Thome remains the only player since Rosen in 1953 to crack the franchise’s top-10 leaderboard in single-season offensive WAR, per Baseball-Reference.
5. Shoeless Joe Jackson, 1912
Slash line: .395/.458/.579 (191 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league with 226 hits, 26 triples and 331 total bases
Jackson also racked up 44 doubles and 26 stolen bases.
4. Tris Speaker, 1923
Slash line: .380/.469/.610 (182 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league with 59 doubles and 130 RBIs, scored 133 runs and totaled 93 walks, compared to only 15 strikeouts
Speaker racked up more homers (17) and nearly as many triples (11) as strikeouts.
3. Albert Belle, 1995
Slash line: .317/.401/.690 (177 OPS+)
Notable: Became the only player in big-league history with 50+ homers and doubles in a season, led the league in homers, doubles, runs, RBIs and slugging percentage
Belle earns some extra points for the uniqueness of his accomplishments. He finished second in the MVP balloting, but even Mo Vaughn knows the voting went awry. In the final two months of the season, Belle batted .350 with an .885 slugging percentage, 31 homers and 23 doubles.
2. Tris Speaker, 1916
Slash line: .386/.470/.502 (186 OPS+)
Notable: Led the league in batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, OPS, OPS+, hits and doubles
In his first season with the Indians, Speaker totaled 211 hits, 41 doubles and 35 stolen bases to go along with a 182 wRC+.
1. Shoeless Joe Jackson, 1911
Slash line: .408/.468/.590 (193 OPS+)
Notable: His 233 hits still stand as the franchise record, and he recorded them in 147 games, to go along with 45 doubles, 19 triples and 41 stolen bases
Jackson actually finished second in the batting title race, behind some guy named Ty Cobb, who hit a career-best .419.