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The Hits That Keep On Hurting Pirates catcher Jason Kendall doesn't mind taking them for the team

When Pirates catcher Jason Kendall was smacked by a Shayne
Bennett pitch on May 31, it was the 16th time Kendall had been
plunked this season, the 62nd in his two-year, two-month-old
major league career. At this pace of taking not one but many for
the team, Kendall will eclipse the alltime big league record
late in the 2005 season or early in 2006, at the age of 31. If
he lives that long.

"Don't get me wrong," he says, laughing. "It's not funny. It
hurts. I hope I don't get the record. My left arm is pretty much
black and blue for six months."

Still, Kendall is well on his way to breaking every major
hit-by-pitch record in the books. Last year's 31 plunks
eviscerated the season mark (24) for a catcher set by Bill
Freehan 30 years ago. Kendall is almost half way toward the
career record for catchers, Carlton Fisk's 143.

"Being a catcher helps," Kendall says. "You get that mentality."
Maybe you do, maybe you don't: Kendall's catcher-father, Fred,
came to the plate more than 2,800 times in his 12-year career
and was hit just six times.

Even if Kendall fades down the stretch this season and only
matches his 1997 total, that would make him the first man in
this century to have two 30-HBP seasons in his career, let alone
in back-to-back years, and would vault him well into the career
top 100 of all time.

Then there are the Big Three, the Aaron, Maris and Ruth of hit
batsmen--Don Baylor, Ron Hunt and Hughie Jennings. Baylor holds
the modern career record of 267 and is one of only two batters
to get plunked as many as 35 times in a season since 1899. Hunt,
whose modern career record Baylor broke, was leveled 50 times in
1971, the modern single-season record, inspiring his remark,
"Some people give their bodies to science; I gave mine to
baseball." Jennings is first on the Society for American
Baseball Research's alltime list for both career (287) and
season (51 in 1896).

In the brawl-mad 1990s, where the average hit batsman presumes
cause, Kendall has the detached attitude of a lifer. "Never
charged the mound," he says. "I've never been intentionally
thrown at. It's just that a lot of teams pitch me in; not
everybody has Greg Maddux-type control."

Kendall does have active rivals: Craig Biggio has been hit nine
times this year and has led the majors three years running, but
he turns 33 next winter. Brady Anderson and F.P. Santangelo are
the only other active players to have suffered seasons of as
many as 22 HBPs. The field is presumably Kendall's, if he wants
it.

"It's not like I go home and practice it in the off-season," he
says. "I don't stand in the batting cage and point to my
shoulder and say, 'Try over here.'"

B/W PHOTO: CORBIS/BETTMANN Battered Jennings was the alltime hit leader, with 287 HBPs. [Hughie Jennings]