Cecil Fielder
Rickey Henderson in 25 straight seasons!! Ty Cobb in 24 seasons
ray allen
The UPS guy asked me this and seems to think my beloved Cardinals is the team with only 2 consecutive losing seasons in the last 30 or 40 years but hopefully someone can confirm and explain. When you google it only seems to correlate losing with most. ---- The Cardinals had consecutive losing seasons in 1994 (53-61) and 1995 (62-81). Prior to that their last consecutive losing seasons came in 1958 and 1959. Since the 1960 season, the Cardinals are the only MLB team to have one set of consecutive losing seasons. The Los Angeles Dodgers have had two sets of consecutive losing seasons since 1960 (1967-1968 and 1986-1987).
Rickey Henderson homered in 25 consecutive seasons
1) Hank Aaron in 17 seasons from 1955-1971. 2) Pete Rose in 16 seasons from 1965-1980. 3) Derek Jeter in 16 seasons from 1996-2011.
In the Nascar Cup Series, Richard Petty had the longest yearly winning streak. The King won at least one race in 18 consecutive seasons (1960-1977).
LaDainian Tomlinson of the San Diego Chargers with 9 consecutive seasons (2001-2009) of 10+ rushing TDs per season. The next highest is Shaun Alexander of the Seattle Seahawks with 5 consecutive seasons (2001-2005). The active longest streak is 4 (2007-2010) by Adrian Peterson of the Minnesota Vikings.
Prince Fielder is at least half African American as his father is Cecil Fielder, former Detroit Tiger great who is African American.
There are at least four seasons
The Detroit Lions, winners of just 53 games covering the 1998-2008 seasons, reaching its nadir with 2008's winless season.
At least 8 seasons
Albert Pujols of the Cardinals and Ted Williams of the Red Sox drove in 100+ runs in each of their first eight seasons. Al Simmons of the Athletics drove in 100+ runs in each of his first eleven seasons. Some others that had 100+ RBIs in at least eight consecutive seasons were Babe Ruth (1926-1933), Lou Gehrig (1926-1938), Manny Ramirez (1998-2006), Willie Mays (1959-1966), Sammy Sosa (1995-2003), Jimmie Foxx (1929-1941), Mel Ott (1929-1936), Rafael Palmeiro (1995-2003), and Frank Thomas (1991-1998).