Ichiro Suzuki doesn't believe in vacations.
The last time he took one — 2004 or '05, he doesn't recall which — was a week-long trip to Milan, Italy. He worked out pretty much the entire time and said the excursion threw him out of sync for two or three weeks.
Never again, he vowed.
"That's the last time I took a vacation," he said.
Suzuki doesn't much care for down time, either. Every now and then, he'll take a day trip to Cooperstown to check out the Hall of Fame. A frequent visitor, he wallows in the history of the sport, knows it inside and out.
But that's about it.
His typical offseason — if it can be called that — hardly exists.
"Three or four days, tops," said his translator, Allen Turner.
Most players head home or travel the world to unwind the moment the season ends. But Suzuki is back in the cages, practicing his swing, within days after the last game has been played.
"I'm telling you," Turner said, "there's nobody in the world that takes more swings over the course of a year than this guy. Guaranteed."
As the iconic outfielder for the Marlins prepares to embark on his 26th season in professional baseball — the past 16 of them in the U.S. majors _ Suzuki is an enigma.
At 43, he is the oldest position player in the majors. Only Braves pitcher Bartolo Colon — 51 days his senior — is older among active players. And yet there is no sign of quit in him.
He said he wants to continue playing until he's 50.
"I'm not joking when I say it," Suzuki said.
Few would second-guess his intentions.
Despite his age, Suzuki is in supreme physical condition. His workout regimen is legend. Like all teams, the Marlins have a weight room that players use to stay in shape.
Suzuki has his own, a metal cargo container set up behind the clubhouse at the team's spring training facility in Jupiter, Fla. It contains an assortment of machines he uses to keep fit.
It's its own tourist attraction. St. Louis Cardinals infielder Matt Carpenter wandered over a few days ago just so he could take a gander at it.
"Physically, unless you have some kind of injury, you don't really need a break," Suzuki said of his relentless work ethic. "I think mentally you sometimes need a break. But for me, my body is built so that if I don't work out, that's when I put more stress on my body and get more tired.
"For me, if I stay on the couch all day — or even one day — I'll be more tired doing that than going out and giving my body a workout."
Said Keizo Konishi, a veteran sportswriter who has steadfastly chronicled Suzuki's entire big-league career for Kyodo News, a Japanese wire agency: "He's from a different planet."
Suzuki has accomplished about all there is to accomplish in baseball. He recorded his 3,000th hit last season and is a virtual lock for the Hall of Fame.
He ranks 25th all-time in hits and should climb a few rungs this season, passing Rod Carew, Rickey Henderson, Craig Biggio and Dave Winfield — Hall of Famers all — on his march up the ladder.
Suzuki has no intention of stopping anytime soon, anytime before he turns 50.
"Nobody knows what the future holds," Suzuki said. "But the way I feel, how I'm thinking, I feel like nothing can stop me from doing it."
Why rest now?
"When you retire from baseball, you have until the day you die to rest," he said.
And when the day finally comes to retire?
"I think I'll just die," he said.
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