alex rodriguez. By 2000, talk had ceased of Ken Griffey Jr. He had too many injuries to make a run at it during his career. Arod was the fastest to 200 and 300 agewise. They were definitely talking Arod
2006-10-12 23:53:31
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Ken Griffey Jr, until then he was hitting 40 or more homeruns every year. In 2000 he hit 40 hr in his first year with the Reds but he has been injury plagued since. Right now he has 563 homeruns. If he had averaged 40 since 2001 he would have,had 678 by now. But injuries are a part of the game and he just hasn't been able to stay healthy. Now the talk is all about Arod but in 2000 Griffey was definitely THE MAN!
2006-10-13 02:10:04
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answer #2
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answered by . 4
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Ken Griffey Jr
2006-10-13 12:23:34
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Ken Griffey Jr
2006-10-13 10:15:55
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answer #4
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answered by 69 GTO 3
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Ken Griffey Jr
2006-10-13 02:19:38
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answer #5
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answered by bucsandducks 6
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It was Ken Griffey Jr published on April 13, 2000 in SI. I guess 13 is a bad luck for some people ("I think Junior might [break Aaron's record]," says Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Curt Schilling, a student of the game and its history. "A lot of things have to go right, outside of him staying healthy, but, yeah, I definitely think if there's somebody out there, it would be him.")
2006-10-13 01:41:12
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answer #6
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answered by Colin L 5
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Ken Griffey Jr.
2006-10-13 02:53:29
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answer #7
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answered by cookie78monster 4
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Ken Griffey Jr answers the radio trivia
2006-10-13 02:51:31
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answer #8
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answered by geoff777us 3
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Ken Griffey Jr.
2006-10-13 02:17:49
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answer #9
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answered by sunshine05rose 5
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I'm not sure about a 2000 interview, but I do know that in the late '90's and after, Ken Griffey, Jr. was said to be the one most likely to do it.
: )
2006-10-12 23:55:46
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answer #10
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answered by rockiebattles411 7
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