hawk1689 said:
I always thought of Wade Boggs' 24 home runs in '87 as one of those strange outlier seasons for a player.
From the outside looking in, it looked like a steroid year across the board, but then the next year everyone regressed to the mean.
In the NL, you had 2 guys (Dawson/Murphy) hit over 40 and 5 other guys (Strawberry, Eric Davis, Howard Johnson, Mike Schmit, Jack Clark) hit 35+. Those were career highs for everyone by Schmidt, but he was already 36 at the time. Dason never hit more than 32 in any other season then randomly hit 49.
In the AL, you had 2 guys hit over 40 (McGwire, George Bell) and TWELVE guys hit 32-34, including guys who never came close to that again - Matt Nokes, Tom Brunansty, Mike Pagliaurulo, Wally Joyner, Cory Snyder, etc.
Joyner's 2nd highest season was 22, rather like Dawson, George Bell's second-highest season was 31. He didn't even get to 300 HR (265) despite getting 47 in one year! Brook Jacoby's high was 20.
Only Tony Gwynn didn't see affected. In '86 he hit .329 with 14 HR, in 1987 he hit .370 with 7 HR