A sharp batting eye and extraordinary fielding ability at first base led Ty Cobb to call George Sisler "the
nearest thing to a perfect ballplayer." The owner of an engineering degree, Sisler was one of baseball's most
intelligent and graceful players, starring predominantly for the St. Louis Browns. He won two batting titles,
hitting over .400 both times, and amassed an astounding total of 257 hits in 1920, a record that stood for 84
years until surpassed by Ichiro Suzuki in 2004. He had a 41-game hitting streak in 1922, hit .300 or better 13
times and had a sizzling .340 lifetime batting average.