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Everyone had the same question after the Baseball Hall of Fame’s 2025 class was unveiled on Tuesday:

Who was the lone person who didn’t vote for Ichiro Suzuki?

The Japanese superstar more than made the cut for Cooperstown enshrinement — along with ex-Yankees great CC Sabathia and former Mets closer Billy Wagner — coming up just one vote short of unanimity.

Ichiro played 19 MLB seasons after coming stateside in 2001, instantly becoming a fan favorite en route to Rookie of the Year, MVP, Gold Glove and Silver Slugger honors in his first season with the Mariners.

He went on to collect 3,089 hits 1,420 runs, 509 stolen bases, 10 Gold Gloves, two batting titles, 10 All-Star selections and set an MLB single-season record with 262 hits in 2004.

All told, he picked up 393 of 394 potential votes for Hall of Fame entry.

Sportswriters, insiders and analysts didn’t hide their disdain for the still anonymous 394th voter.

“Ichiro missed unanimity by 1 vote,” The Post’s Jon Heyman wrote on X. “Please step forward, you numbskull.”

ESPN NFL analyst Damien Woody shared the sentiment about the first Japanese-born player to be inducted into Cooperstown.

“Who was the numbskull that didn’t vote for Ichiro?” the ex-Jets star queried in a post on X.

Just like everyone else, “Underdog MLB” podcaster Jared Carrabis was miffed.

“Not sure how you could be a Hall of Fame voter looking at Ichiro’s body of work and be like, ‘Yeah, I just don’t see it,’” he said.

Fox Sports analyst Ben Verlander called for action — at least on the part of the yet-to-be-named voter.

“Ichiro missed being a unanimous Hall of Famer by 1 vote,” he wrote. “Out yourself. Who didn’t vote for Ichiro. And why?

Longtime ESPN insider Buster Olney was perhaps more diplomatic — even if he, too, was bewildered.

“It’ll be interesting to see if the person who didn’t vote for Ichiro is transparent in the reasoning behind that decision,” he wrote.

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