I think these topics are getting tougher and tougher to discuss. In the last debate, when conversing about the greatest dynasties ever, there were so many to choose from that narrowing it down to one was pretty tough, as seen by the various suggestions put out there, all of which were really well discussed in my opinion, not to mention the numerous other choices that could have been put out there and were not.
Topic #6 is no different. There are so many statistics out there, where it be team or individual, whether it be college, high school, or professional, whether it be main stream high profile sports or the more low key ones, any of a number of suggestions could be made, all of which would be excellent choices.
As he has through the earlier rounds, Megatron has done yet another excellent job. His suggestion of Joe DiMaggio's hit streak of 56 games is difficult to challenge. It is one of many well respected achievements which is universally known and revered and he is quite right, it likely will never be beaten.
As difficult as it may be to challenge it, though, I have to do so. All due respect, Megatron picked the correct sport, the statistics-focused Major League Baseball, where every accomplishment, every stat is analyzed and dissected to death, but I feel he picked the wrong record. I think he picked the second most impressive, or possibly even the third, but DiMaggio's major accomplishment is not the most unbreakable.
In looking at the most unbreakable, I tend to think more of career accomplishments rather than single season. It is probably easier to pull off some remarkable single season feat than it is to sustain it over an entire career. Which of course makes me slight full of it, because as I already said, there's nothing easy about a 56 game hitting streak and I don't see this stat being in any jeopardy any time soon.
I considered Cal Ripken Jr.'s iron man streak as possible being worthy of consideration, because here we have a long-term career accomplishment which is awesome and which I also don't think will ever be beaten, as the way the game of baseball is played in the modern era is different now than it used to be. With contract issues, free agency, greed of players and management alike, and a general lack of loyalty in both directions, playing this many consecutive games will likely not be seen again anytime soon, if ever.
Yet, there is one statistic, one accomplishment, one record which for me is more significant than all of them, one which is absolutely untouchable and unbreakable. I am referring to the career hits header, the incomparable Pete Rose, with his career base hit total of 4256 career hits.
When you think about it, this is a truly tremendous feat. Quite honestly, I don't know how he managed to do it. There's no spin I can put on it which lessens his accomplishment in any way whatsoever. You can talk about the era he played in, the teams that he played with or against, the quality of pitching he faced, whatever, and it's awesome in any context.
Look at the list of career hits leaders. Almost all of them are Hall of Famers. Ironically, Charlie Hustle is not one of them, the single most unfair travesty of justice in professional sports, but that's another discussion for another day. Historically, 3000 hits is a lock to put someone who is not a gambler or a steroid user into the Hall of Fame. 3000. And he hit 1200+ more than this. 1256 more! That's mind boggling. Look at the guys on the career hits leader board with him. Ty Cobb is the only guy even close, at 4191. Then it dramatically drops puff to 3771 for Hank Aaron, 3630 for Stan Musial, and so on and so on. Pretty elite company, and the only one even close is Ty Cobb. Third place is 485 hits behind.
Look at the guys who played in my era. Paul Molitor. Wade Boggs. Cal Ripken Jr. George Brett. Robin Yount. Tony Gwynn. Honus Wagner (OK, maybe I'm not quite that old!). A who's who of hitting prowess and consistency. And they are miles behind the career hits totals of Pete Rose. You can see names on the list who were household names throughout their long and illustrious careers, and they finished with more than a thousand fewer career base hits than Rose did.
Look at the active players on the list. Derek Jeter is 36 years old and he's at 2926. He'll obviously crack 3000 and be a sure fire first ballot Hall of Famer when he hangs up the cleats. But somehow, I don't think he will hit 1230 more base hits. Likewise, Ivan Rodriguez at 38 years of age with 2817 career base hits, or Omar Vizquel at the age of 43 with 2799 hits, are other candidates for the Hall of Fame, but they won't get within a thousand hits of Pete Rose.
200 hits per season is considered by most to be a terrific season, and it is, no doubt about it. Try doing it for 21 consecutive seasons. Try to maintain this degree of consistent excellence, while avoiding slumps, injuries, contract disputes, etc., for greater than two decades. Every year. While still playing superb defence and playing with a passion and intensity which for the most part is sorely lacking in today's game. Playing a style of baseball which was so fiery that it lead to physical contact in the All Star Game.
Sure, some guys hit more than 200 per season. Ichiro Suzuki hit 262 in 2004, 242 in 2001, and 238 in 2007. Ichiro is a tremendous hitter and an excellent all-round baseball player, but I don't see even him sustaining this consistency for 20+ seasons, assuming he even plays this long. He hasn't really displayed it really for one decade, never mind two. Look at Wade Boggs and how tremendous a hitter he was. His highest single season total was 240 in 1985, and he was a hitting machine. Even he wasn't putting up numbers like Rose was.
Some of you will say that he was a part of a dynasty, the Big Red Machine and as such, was surrounded by a plethora of excellent players and as such, probably saw more pitches to hit than other guys may have. In other words, you couldn't pitch around him easily because he was surrounded by such a talented roster. To which I say bullshit. Just because he saw more pitches was no guarantee that he was going to consistently hit them. With all due respect to his teammates, it is likely that Rose got pitched around a fair share as well in lieu of other guys. Plus, any top hitter on any excellent team could make the same claim, yet he's the only one to compile astronomical hit totals like he did.
Give Pete Rose his due credit. The most unbreakable record in the history of sports is
Pete Rose's career base hits record of 4256. . No doubt about it. And for the love of God, put the man in the Hall of Fame where he absolutely deserves to be. This should not be a continued omission, nor will it be appropriate to credit him posthumously once he moves on to the other side. He's already in the WWE Hall of Fame

, now put him into Cooperstown. No one deserves it more than he does, indiscretions considered.