There is something distinctly human in the importance given to round numbers. Is 400 really all that much more impressive than 399?
No. Itâs just one more hit in a career full of them.
But the value of a round-number statistic like the one Orioles shortstop Gunnar Henderson reached in Fridayâs win comes with the company he joins. The names are serious. With his opposite-field double, Henderson became the sixth player in Orioles history to reach 400 hits before turning 24.
The others? Cal Ripken Jr., Eddie Murray, Boog Powell, Brooks Robinson and Manny Machado.
That group includes three Hall of Famers, one partial owner of the club, a potential future Hall of Famer and another guy who has his name on a much-loved barbecue stand on Eutaw Street.
The significance isnât lost on Henderson, even if itâs likely that heâll produce another 400 hits in a few years during what could be a long career.
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âThose are some of the all-time greats,â Henderson said. âBeing in a sentence with them is pretty special and something that Iâll hold dear to me.â
Henderson will turn 24 on June 29, so he has time to add to his pre-24 numbers. Machado, who debuted as a 20-year-old, leads the group with 699 hits (wouldnât 700 have been that much sweeter?), followed by Ripken (569), Murray (526), Powell (468) and Robinson (414).
Itâs not the first time Henderson has matched a milestone only a few Orioles in history have managed. Last year, when he hit 37 home runs, he passed Ripken and Miguel Tejada for the most homers in a single season by an Orioles shortstop.
Hendersonâs climb has been rapid.
âIt seems like it flew by,â Henderson said.
He debuted as a 21-year-old late in 2022, and he homered in his first game. He returned in 2023 with an .814 on-base-plus-slugging percentage and the American League Rookie of the Year award. He became an MVP candidate last season with his .893 OPS.

And, although Henderson is quick to admit heâs not hitting as well as heâd like this season, his overall numbers are manageable during the first 49 games of his season. The Selma, Alabama, native is hitting .259 with a .763 OPS.
âHis swing probably isnât feeling like the Gunnar Henderson swing we saw last year, the OPS .900,â interim manager Tony Mansolino said. âI think we talk a lot about having your âAâ swing, and itâs not realistic to have your âAâ swing for 500 plate appearances every year.â
Instead, Mansolino said, players have to make the most of their âBâ and âCâ swings, bridging the gap until they feel their best again.
âThey just have to. You canât sit there and wait for their âAâ swings to show up all the time,â Mansolino said. âYou have to compete with what youâve got. The hitting guys have been in there a lot with Gunn. Theyâre grinding with him. Heâs taking it personal. Theyâre taking it personal. The best thing theyâre doing right now is, as theyâre searching for that âAâ swing, theyâre getting the kid to compete every night.â
Henderson helped the Orioles produce a rally in Fridayâs win when he followed Adley Rutschmanâs sixth-inning single with an opposite-field double. He added another opposite-field knock later in the game.
Both hits showcased an approach Henderson would like to replicate frequently. Rather than doing too much, he poked both outside pitches in the direction they were pitched.
As Henderson strives to find more consistency â because to him his numbers arenât yet where they should be â reducing the pressure on himself could pay dividends. After all, when adding up to 400 hits, a single counts the same as a homer.
âItâs been a little bit of a struggle, but I feel like Iâve been making good work and making good strides toward where I want to be,â Henderson said. âTook what the pitcher gave me tonight, and I feel like I need to build on that and Iâll get back to where I need to be.â
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