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Undersized and with a weird swing, Ichiro Suzuki stood out because of two Hall of Fame careers across 28 years in pro baseball.
Ichiro Suzuki walks off the field after batting practice before a game against the Washington Nationals at T-Mobile Park on May 27, 2025 in Seattle, Washington.
SEATTLE -- Ichiro Suzuki paused at times to collect his thoughts and placed ... Over his 19-year career, Suzuki was a ...
The Seattle Mariners retired Ichiro Suzuki's No. 51 in a special ceremony on Saturday night at T-Mobile Park. It's the third player number to be retired by the organization, along with Ken Griffey ...
Ichiro Suzuki now has 4,257 hits in his pro baseball career -- surpassing Pete Rose's MLB total. "To be honest, this wasn't something that I was a making out as a goal," Suzuki said.
Ichiro Suzuki became the first Japanese-born player inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, during a ceremony in New York.
Before 27-year-old Ichiro Suzuki burst onto the Major League Baseball scene in 2001, he already had enjoyed a full career in his native Japan. A legendary career, He played nine seasons with the ...
The Mariners retired the iconic No. 51 on Saturday, honoring Ichiro Suzuki in a pregame ceremony at T-Mobile Park before ...
Former Seattle Mariner Ichiro Suzuki is officially in the National Baseball Hall of Fame, and the team wants to celebrate the achievement with you.
Ichiro Suzuki claimed he had never heard of the Marlins before signing with them during his Hall of Fame speech.
Pete Rose doesn't think Ichiro Suzuki's hits in Japan should count toward passing his major league hits record.