For the next 13 seasons, Cabrera would show it with remarkable consistency and durability. He came to bat more than any other major leaguer from 2004 through 2016 — and produced at the highest rate, too. Of the 104 players with at least 5,000 plate appearances in those seasons, Cabrera had the best on-base plus slugging percentage: .968.
He did most of his damage with the Tigers, who traded six players for him and the left-handed pitcher Dontrelle Willis in December 2007. Two of the players — outfielder Cameron Maybin and the left-handed pitcher Andrew Miller — would have long careers. But the deal was a coup for the Tigers, who would win four consecutive division titles and an American League pennant in Cabrera’s prime.
In the afterglow of his 2012 triple crown season, the Tigers rewarded Cabrera with an eight-year, $240 million contract that would not begin until 2016. The deal was an overreach; Cabrera’s production inevitably declined, and he has been roughly a league-average hitter the last five seasons. The Tigers fell in the standings and are still rebuilding.
But the contract, if nothing else, ensured that Cabrera’s milestone moments would happen for the Tigers, the team that benefited most from the promise he showed at age 20. McKeon never altered the fundamental rules of baseball, of course, but he sure was right about Cabrera.
Something good, indeed, was happening with that guy.