#7
of 30
Ken Griffey Jr.
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Ken Griffey Jr. is one of the most iconic power hitters ever, and his offense stands up beyond aesthetics. He reached 630 home runs despite injuries that clearly robbed him of additional prime seasons. During the mid-to-late 1990s, he was a yearly MVP-level bat with elite home-run output and loud production. His power wasn’t empty; it translated into real run creation and lineup protection effects. He wasn’t a pure three-true-outcomes slugger either—his contact ability kept him from being overly exploitable. Griffey’s best seasons came in an era with plenty of power, and he still looked different from the crowd. He delivered monster peaks while playing center field, which amplifies how valuable that bat was. Even when injuries accumulated, he remained dangerous because the power skill aged well. If you’re ranking outfielders by “who could change a game with one swing,” Griffey is near the top. He’s a generational offensive centerpiece whose peak belongs in any all-time conversation.
Career Numbers
.284
AVG
2,781
Hits
630
HR
1,836
RBI
184
SB
.907
OPS