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This is a list of the 300 Major League Baseball players who have hit the most career home runs in regular season play (i.e., excluding playoffs or exhibition games). In the sport of baseball, a home run is a hit in which the batter scores by circling all the bases and reaching home plate in one play
This is a list of some of the records relating to home runs hit in baseball games played in the Major Leagues.Some Major League records are sufficiently notable to have their own page, for example the single-season home run record, the progression of the lifetime home run record, and the members of the 500 home run club.
Ruth set the Major League Baseball single-season home run record four times, first at 29 (1919), then 54 (1920), 59 (1921), and finally 60 (1927), all in the American League. [12] Ruth's 1920 and 1921 seasons are tied for the widest margin of victory for a home run champion as he topped the next highest total by 35 home runs in each season.
Aaron Judge has 300 career home runs, but he's not even halfway toward reaching Barry Bonds, who is the all-time Major League Baseball leader with 762. Bonds, who hit his final home run in 2007 ...
Swinging at a 3-0 pitch, Judge launched career home run No. 300, becoming the fastest player to reach that milestone in a 10-2 Yankees’ win at Guaranteed Rate Field.
Shohei Ohtani's 175th home run in the majors was not only a milestone, it was record-tying. Ohtani equaled Hideki Matsui for the most homers by a Japanese-born player with a solo shot during the ...
Hit two home runs as a pinch hitter. [8] Warren Spahn † 35 35 [9] Red Ruffing † 34 36 Hit two home runs as a pinch hitter. [10] Earl Wilson: 33 35 Hit two home runs as a pinch hitter. [11] Don Drysdale † 29 29 [12] John Clarkson † 24 24 [23] Bob Gibson † 24 24 [24] Carlos Zambrano: 24 24 [25] Walter Johnson † 23 24 Hit one home run ...
This is a list of the Major League Baseball (MLB) players who have hit a home run in their final major league at bat. The feat was first accomplished in 1890 by Buck West, and most recently by Stephen Vogt in 2022. Paul Gillespie and John Miller are the only players in MLB history to hit home runs in their first and last major-league at bats.