#4
of 20
Jeter’s greatness lies in sustained offensive consistency and elite hit accumulation. Nearly 3,500 hits is not a trivia nugget—it’s an offensive foundation that only a handful of humans have ever built. His value came from elite contact, strong situational hitting, and the ability to keep the line moving while still doing real damage in big spots. He wasn’t a true slugger, but he consistently produced quality at-bats and turned them into runs in a way that scales across eras. Postseason performance matters when you’re talking about career impact, and he has a mountain of October value. In an offense-weighted ranking, I care that he was reliably above average for forever, not that he didn’t have a 50-homer season. His peak years were still star-level, and his floor was high enough to avoid the dead years that sink many long careers. Put him in a lineup and you’re buying stability, run creation, and relentless pressure. He’s also the kind of hitter who ages well—contact and approach kept him useful long after tools faded. People over-argue his defense; offensively he’s an all-time shortstop and the record backs that up. He’s not above A-Rod or Ripken in this framework, but he’s clearly in the next tier. That’s why he lands fourth.

Career Numbers

.310
AVG
3,465
Hits
260
HR
1,311
RBI
358
SB
.817
OPS