SEATTLE — Luis Arraez shook hands with Ichiro Suzuki this week during the Twins' series in Seattle — "a great honor," the Twins' infielder said, to meet the two-time AL batting champion. "He's a great hitter. Looks like he still is."
Like Suzuki, Arraez is an on-base specialist, currently leading the majors in on-base percentage with a .436 average entering Wednesday. Suzuki retired with a .355 career OBP, but it was .378 through his first nine seasons with the Mariners, taking him to age 35.
But Suzuki also showed power during his career, averaging 33.7 extra-base hits with the Mariners, and reaching double-digits in home runs three times. It was often said that Suzuki could have been an elite power hitter if he had chosen to be that, rather than a high-average batsman.
Could Arraez be a home-run hitter if he altered his approach? manager Rocco Baldelli doesn't even like to think about it.
"That statement, which I've also heard many times, takes the discussion in the wrong direction. There's a difference between having power and being guys who could 'easily' hit 30 homers. It's two different things, in my opinion," Baldelli said. "What made them special is what they did do. What made them special is the fact that they were so consistent, and that alone, that's a real important trait that they have that almost no one else had.
"Sure, Ichiro could bang balls off the glass four levels up over here, and he had tremendous power. But those discussions get kind of warped a little bit when we start talking about them."
Arraez doesn't mind the comparison — "Sure, I'd like to hit home runs," he conceded — but sounded skeptical that his talents would ever allow it. Better to stick with what is working, he said.
"I just only try to be hitting line drives. That's how I [contribute]," said Arraez, who owns nine career home runs, including a grand slam off Rays righthander Shane Baz last Saturday. "I know Ichiro could hit home runs, but I just want to hit line drives."