US – Friday, July 3
Updated 12:17, May the 12th, 2008
 

Manny nearing major milestone

Boston’s favorite dreadlocked outfielder is closing in on 500 career homers.
 
Boston’s favorite dreadlocked outfielder is closing in on 500 career homers. Photo: GETTY IMAGES
 
By the numbers

Manny Ramirez is the only player in Major League history to amass 800 career RBIs with two different teams. Ramirez totaled 804 RBIs during his tenure with the Cleveland Indians and has 828 RBIs during his eight seasons with the Red Sox. Only Hall of Famer Jimmie Foxx and Rafael Palmeiro have amassed 700 career RBIs with two different teams.   
 

JH/Metro
 

MLB. Make no mistake; Manny Ramirez knows his hardball history.

The veteran slugger respects the important and impending baseball milestone that waits just three home runs away, but that doesn’t mean the 35-year-old is ready to cash in his baseball chips once he arrives there.

Ramirez can already taste the 500 career homer mark that looms on the radar screen, and he’s raring to keep on pushing to 600 round-trippers — a hallowed place where only baseball immortals like Barry Bonds, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, Willie Mays and Sammy Sosa currently reside.

“Why not, man?” said Ramirez, who was not in last night’s starting lineup against the Twins because of a balky hamstring. “If you love the game and you love to compete … why would you stop?”

Ramirez entered last night’s action among the AL’s top 10 in home runs, slugging percentage, runs scored, RBIs and on-base plus slugging, and he appears poised to cash in on a $20 million 2009 team option following this season. The Sox cleanup man has already stated his desire to play another six seasons in red socks — a tenure that would surely see his numbers swell to first ballot Hall of Fame levels.

Does Manny think much about the Cooperstown plaque that surely awaits when he finally hangs up the doo-rag for the final time?

“It would be an honor for to me to be considered for [the Hall of Fame], but family always comes first for me, because the game is still going to be going on long after I’m gone,” said Ramirez. “All you got is your family. That’s why I try to keep myself humble. Family is all that I’ve got when this is all over.

“I don’t think much about [my numbers],” added Ramirez. “That’s a good thing. I just like to compete and play the game. It’s like in a game when a pitcher goes out there and strikes you out — and then he shows off. I love it, man. It’s like an inner drive where you want to go get that guy, and you want to show him. I’m not ever trying to embarrass anybody. I just like to make the game fun.”

Making the game look easy and fun are things that Ramirez will never have to fret about on his journey to immortality.

 
 


Metro Life Panel