I present to you the list of every major leaguer who has scored the Kris Bryant projected 136 or more runs in a season since 1937: 2011: Curtis Granderson (136) 2007: Alex Rodriguez (143), Jimmy Rollins (139) 2003: Albert Pujols (137) 2001: Sammy Sosa (146) 2000: Jeff Bagwell (152!), Todd Helton (138), Johnny Damon (136) 1999: Bagwell (143), Roberto Alomar (138) 1997: Craig Biggio (146), Larry Walker (143), 1996: Ellis Burks (142), A-Rod (141), Chuck Knoblauch (140), 1993: Leonard Dykstra (143) 1985: Ricky Henderson (146) 1982: Paul Molitor (136) 1970: Billy Williams (137) 1949: Ted Williams (150) 1948: Tommy Henrich (138) 1947: Johnny Mize (138) 1946: Ted Williams (142) 1942: T. Williams (142) 1939: Red Rolfe (139) 1938: Hank Greenberg (143), Jimmie Foxx (139) 1937: Joe Dimaggio (151), Rolfe (143), Lou Gehrig (138), Greenberg (137) So since 1980 only 18 people have scored 136 or more runs. Of those 18, 12 of them happened during the prime of the steroid/big offense era. So even during the steroid era when offense was at it's peak performance, scoring 136 runs was still not an easy thing to do. I stopped at 1937 because when they made changes to the ball in 1920 and offense changed forever, there was at least one, if not more, than one guy scoring well over 136 runs a season from like 1920-1937 each year and I got tired of typing them all down. Before 1920 in the deadball era the only guys scoring more than 136 runs were few and far between, but the only guys to do it between 1900 and 1920 were Ty Cobb (twice), Eddie Collins, Ginger Beaumont, Nap Lajoie, and Jesse Burkett.