List of Major League Baseball home run records

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 70.143.64.23 (talk) at 10:26, 3 October 2008 (→‎Eight or more consecutive seasons with 30 home runs). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Players denoted in boldface are still actively contributing to the record noted.

(r) denotes a player's rookie season.

500 career home runs

Player HR[1] Teams and seasons
Barry Bonds 762 Pittsburgh Pirates (1986–92), San Francisco Giants (1993–2007)
Hank Aaron 755 Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1954–74), Milwaukee Brewers (1975–76)
Babe Ruth 714 Boston Red Sox (1914–19), New York Yankees (1920–34), Boston Braves (1935)
Willie Mays 660 New York/San Francisco Giants (1951–52, 1954–72), New York Mets (1972–73)
Ken Griffey, Jr. 611 Seattle Mariners (1989–99), Cincinnati Reds (2000–2008), Chicago White Sox (2008-Present)
Sammy Sosa 609 Texas Rangers (1989, 2007), Chicago White Sox (1989–91), Chicago Cubs (1992–2004), Baltimore Orioles (2005)
Frank Robinson 586 Cincinnati Reds (1956–65), Baltimore Orioles (1966–71), Los Angeles Dodgers (1972), California Angels (1973–74), Cleveland Indians (1974–76)
Mark McGwire 583 Oakland Athletics (1986–97), St. Louis Cardinals (1997–2001)
Harmon Killebrew 573 Washington/Minnesota Twins (1954–74), Kansas City Royals (1975)
Rafael Palmeiro 569 Chicago Cubs (1986–88), Texas Rangers (1989–93, 1999–2003), Baltimore Orioles (1994–98, 2004–05)
Reggie Jackson 563 Kansas City/Oakland Athletics (1967–75, 1987), Baltimore Orioles (1976), New York Yankees (1977–81), California Angels (1982–86)
Alex Rodriguez 553 Seattle Mariners (1994–2000), Texas Rangers (2001–03), New York Yankees (2004–present)
Mike Schmidt 548 Philadelphia Phillies (1972–89)
Jim Thome 538 Cleveland Indians (1991–2002), Philadelphia Phillies (2003–05), Chicago White Sox (2006–present)
Mickey Mantle 536 New York Yankees (1951–68)
Jimmie Foxx 534 Philadelphia Athletics (1925–35), Boston Red Sox (1936–42), Chicago Cubs (1942, 1944), Philadelphia Phillies (1945)
Manny Ramirez 524 Cleveland Indians (1993–2000), Boston Red Sox (2001–2008), Los Angeles Dodgers (2008)
Ted Williams 521 Boston Red Sox (1939–42, 1946–60)
Willie McCovey 521 San Francisco Giants (1959–73, 1977–80), San Diego Padres (1974–76), Oakland Athletics (1976)
Frank Thomas 521 Chicago White Sox (1990–2005), Oakland Athletics (2006, 2008–present), Toronto Blue Jays (2007–08)
Eddie Mathews 512 Boston/Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1952–66), Houston Astros (1967), Detroit Tigers (1967–68)
Ernie Banks 512 Chicago Cubs (1953–71)
Mel Ott 511 New York Giants (1926–47)
Eddie Murray 504 Baltimore Orioles (1977–88, 1996), Los Angeles Dodgers (1989–91, 1997), New York Mets (1992–93), Cleveland Indians (1994–96), Anaheim Angels (1997)

Closest active players

Player HR Teams and seasons
Gary Sheffield 497 Milwaukee Brewers (1988–91), San Diego Padres (1992–93), Florida Marlins (1994–98), Los Angeles Dodgers (1998–2001), Atlanta Braves (2002–03), New York Yankees (2004–06), Detroit Tigers (2007–present)
Carlos Delgado 467 Toronto Blue Jays (1993–2004), Florida Marlins (2005), New York Mets (2006–present)

Top 10 career home run leaders by league

American League Player HR National League Player HR
Babe Ruth 708 Barry Bonds 762
Harmon Killebrew 573 Hank Aaron 733
Reggie Jackson 563 Willie Mays 660
Alex Rodriguez 553 Mike Schmidt 548
Rafael Palmeiro 544 Sammy Sosa 545
Mickey Mantle 536 Willie McCovey 521
Jimmie Foxx 524 Ernie Banks 512
Ted Williams 521 Mel Ott 511
Frank Thomas 521 Eddie Mathews 503
Manny Ramirez 510 Stan Musial 475

55 home runs in one season

Player HR [2] Team Season
Barry Bonds 73 San Francisco Giants 2001
Mark McGwire 70 St. Louis Cardinals 1998
Sammy Sosa 66 Chicago Cubs 1998
Mark McGwire 65 St. Louis Cardinals 1999
Sammy Sosa 64 Chicago Cubs 2001
Sammy Sosa 63 Chicago Cubs 1999
Roger Maris 61 New York Yankees 1961
Babe Ruth 60 New York Yankees 1927
Babe Ruth 59 New York Yankees 1921
Jimmie Foxx 58 Philadelphia Athletics 1932
Hank Greenberg 58 Detroit Tigers 1938
Ryan Howard 58 Philadelphia Phillies 2006
Mark McGwire 58 Oakland-St. Louis (NL) 1997
Luis Gonzalez 57 Arizona Diamondbacks 2001
Alex Rodriguez 57 Texas Rangers 2002
Ken Griffey, Jr. 56 Seattle Mariners 1997
Ken Griffey, Jr. 56 Seattle Mariners 1998
Hack Wilson 56 Chicago Cubs 1930

Evolution of the single season record for home runs

HR [3] Player Team Year Years Record Stood
5 George Hall Philadelphia Athletics 1876 3
9 Charley Jones Boston Red Caps 1879 4
10 Buck Ewing New York Giants 1883 1
27 Ned Williamson Chicago White Stockings 1884 35
16 Sam Crawford Cincinnati Reds 1901 (10)
16 Socks Seybold Philadelphia Athletics 1902 (9)
21 Frank Schulte Chicago Cubs 1911 (4)
24 Gavvy Cravath Philadelphia Phillies 1915 (4)
29 Babe Ruth Boston Red Sox 1919 1
54 Babe Ruth New York Yankees 1920 1
59 Babe Ruth New York Yankees 1921 6
60 Babe Ruth New York Yankees 1927 34
61 Roger Maris New York Yankees 1961 37
70 Mark McGwire St. Louis Cardinals 1998 3
73 Barry Bonds San Francisco Giants 2001 current

Crawford's 1901 through Cravath's 1915 records are listed because some baseball historians and publications disregard any record set prior to the "Modern Era" which started in 1901.

Six or more seasons with 40 home runs

Player Titles Seasons and teams
Babe Ruth[4] 11 1920–21, 1923–24, 1926–32 (New York Yankees)
Harmon Killebrew[5] 8 1959, 1961–64, 1967, 1969–70 (Washington/Minnesota Twins)
Henry Aaron[6] 8 1957, 1960, 1962–63, 1966, 1969, 1971, 1973 (Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves)
Barry Bonds[7] 8 1993, 1996–97, 2000–04 (San Francisco Giants)
Alex Rodriguez[8] 8 1998–2000 (Seattle Mariners), 2001–03 (Texas Rangers), 2005, 2007 (New York Yankees)
Ken Griffey, Jr.[9] 7 1993–94, 1996–99 (Seattle Mariners), 2000 (Cincinnati Reds)
Sammy Sosa[10] 7 1996, 1998–2003 (Chicago Cubs)
Mark McGwire[11] 6 1987, 1992, 1996 (Oakland Athletics), 1997 (Oakland Athletics/St. Louis Cardinals), 1998–99 (St. Louis Cardinals)
Jim Thome[12] 6 1997, 2001–02 (Cleveland Indians), 2003–04 (Philadelphia Phillies) 2006 (Chicago White Sox)

Five or more consecutive seasons with 40 home runs

Player Titles Teams and seasons
Babe Ruth 7 1926–32 (New York Yankees)
Alex Rodriguez 6 1998–2000 (Seattle Mariners), 2001–03 (Texas Rangers)
Sammy Sosa 6 1998–2003 (Chicago Cubs)
Ralph Kiner[13] 5 1947–51 (Pittsburgh Pirates)
Duke Snider[14] 5 1953–57 (Brooklyn Dodgers)
Ken Griffey, Jr. 5 1996–99 (Seattle Mariners), 2000 (Cincinnati Reds)
Barry Bonds 5 2000–04 (San Francisco Giants)
Adam Dunn[15] 5 2004–08 (Cincinnati Reds), 2008 (Arizona Diamondbacks)

Eleven or more seasons with 30 home runs

Player Titles Seasons and teams
Hank Aaron 15 1957–63, 1965–67, 1969–73 (Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves)
Barry Bonds 14 1990, 1992 (Pittsburgh Pirates), 1993–2004 (San Francisco Giants)
Babe Ruth 13 1920–24, 1926–33 (New York Yankees)
Mike Schmidt[16] 13 1974–77, 1979–87 (Philadelphia Phillies)
Jimmie Foxx[17] 12 1929–35 (Philadelphia Athletics), 1936–40 (Boston Red Sox)
Alex Rodriguez 12 1996, 1998–2000 (Seattle Mariners), 2001–03 (Texas Rangers), 2004–08 (New York Yankees)
Manny Ramírez[18] 12 1995–96, 1998–2000 (Cleveland Indians), 2001–06 (Boston Red Sox), 08 (Boston-Los Angeles Dodgers)
Jim Thome 12 1996–2002 (Cleveland Indians), 2003–04 (Philadelphia Phillies), 2006–08 (Chicago White Sox)
Frank Robinson[19] 11 1956, 1958–62, 1965 (Cincinnati Reds), 1966–67, 1969 (Baltimore Orioles), 1973 (California Angels)
Willie Mays[20] 11 1954–57, 1959, 1961–66 (New York/San Francisco Giants)
Mark McGwire 11 1987–90, 1992, 1995–96 (Oakland Athletics), 1997 (Oakland Athletics/St. Louis Cardinals), 1998–2000 (St. Louis Cardinals)
Sammy Sosa 11 1993, 1995–2004 (Chicago Cubs)

Eight or more consecutive seasons with 30 home runs

Player Titles Seasons and teams
Barry Bonds 13 1992 (Pittsburgh Pirates), 1993–2004 (San Francisco Giants)
Jimmie Foxx 12 1929–35 (Philadelphia Athletics), 1936–40 (Boston Red Sox)
Alex Rodriguez 11 1998–2000 (Seattle Mariners), 2001–03 (Texas Rangers), 2004–08 (New York Yankees)
Sammy Sosa 10 1995–2004 (Chicago Cubs)
Carlos Delgado[21] 10 1997–2004 (Toronto Blue Jays), 2005 (Florida Marlins), 2006 (New York Mets)
Lou Gehrig[22] 9 1929–37 (New York Yankees)
Eddie Mathews[23] 9 1953–61 (Milwaukee Braves)
Mike Schmidt 9 1979–87 (Philadelphia Phillies)
Rafael Palmeiro[24] 9 1995–98 (Baltimore Orioles), 1999–2003 (Texas Rangers)
Jim Thome 9 1996–2002 (Cleveland Indians), 2003–04 (Philadelphia Phillies)
Manny Ramírez 9 1998–2000 (Cleveland Indians), 2001–06 (Boston Red Sox)
Babe Ruth 8 1926–33 (New York Yankees)
Mike Piazza[25] 8 1995–97 (Los Angeles Dodgers), 1998 (Los Angeles Dodgers/Florida Marlins/New York Mets), 1999–2002 (New York Mets)
Jeff Bagwell[26] 8 1996–2003 (Houston Astros)
Albert Pujols 8 2001–08 (St. Louis Cardinals)

Fifteen or more seasons with 20 home runs

Player Seasons Years and teams
Henry Aaron 20 1955–74 (Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves)
Barry Bonds 19 1987-88, 90–92 (Pittsburgh Pirates), 1993–2004, 2006–07 (San Francisco Giants)
Willie Mays 17 1951, 1954–68, 1970 (New York/San Francisco Giants)
Frank Robinson 17 1956–65 (Cincinnati Reds), 1966–67, 1969–71 (Baltimore Orioles), 1973 (California Angels), 1974 (California Angels/Cleveland Indians)
Babe Ruth 16 1919 (Boston Red Sox), 1920–34 (New York Yankees)
Ted Williams[27] 16 1939–42, 1946–51, 1954–58, 1960 (Boston Red Sox)
Reggie Jackson[28] 16 1968–75 (Oakland Athletics), 1976 (Baltimore Orioles), 1977–80 (New York Yankees), 1982, 1984–85 (California Angels)
Eddie Murray[29] 16 1977–85, 1987–88 (Baltimore Orioles), 1989–90 (Los Angeles Dodgers), 1993 (New York Mets), 1995 (Cleveland Indians), 1996 (Cleveland Indians/Baltimore Orioles)
Mel Ott[30] 15 1929–39, 1941–42, 1944–45 (New York Giants)
Willie Stargell[31] 15 1964–76, 1978–79 (Pittsburgh Pirates)
Dave Winfield[32] 15 1974, 1977–80 (San Diego Padres), 1982–83, 1985–88 (New York Yankees), 1990 (New York Yankees/California Angels), 1991 (California Angels), 1992 (Toronto Blue Jays), 1993 (Minnesota Twins)
Ken Griffey, Jr. 15 1990–94, 1996–99 (Seattle Mariners), 2000–01, 2004–07 (Cincinnati Reds)

Thirteen or more consecutive seasons with 20 home runs

Player Seasons Years and teams
Henry Aaron 20 1955–74 (Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves)
Babe Ruth 16 1919 (Boston Red Sox), 1920–34 (New York Yankees)
Willie Mays 15 1954–68 (New York/San Francisco Giants)
Barry Bonds 15 1990–92 (Pittsburgh Pirates), 1993–2004 (San Francisco Giants)
Eddie Mathews 14 1952–65 (Boston/Milwaukee Braves)
Rafael Palmeiro 14 1991–93, 1999–2004 (Texas Rangers), 1994–98 (Baltimore Orioles)
Manny Ramírez 14 1995–2000 (Cleveland Indians), 2001–07 (Boston Red Sox), 08 (Boston Red Sox/Los Angeles Dodgers)
Billy Williams[33] 13 1961–73 (Chicago Cubs)
Willie Stargell 13 1964–76 (Pittsburgh Pirates)
Reggie Jackson 13 1968–75 (Oakland Athletics), 1976 (Baltimore Orioles), 1977–80 (New York Yankees)
Chipper Jones[34] 13 1995–2007 (Atlanta Braves)
Alex Rodriguez 13 1996-2000 (Seattle Mariners), 2001-03 (Texas Rangers), 2004-08 (New York (AL))

League leader in home runs, 5 or more seasons

Player Titles[35] Years and teams
Babe Ruth 12 1918–19 (Boston Red Sox), 1920–21, 1923–24, 1926–31 (New York Yankees)
Mike Schmidt 8 1974–76, 1980–81, 1983–84, 1986 (Philadelphia Phillies)
Ralph Kiner 7 1946–52 (Pittsburgh Pirates)
Gavvy Cravath 6 1913–15, 1917–19 (Philadelphia Phillies)
Mel Ott 6 1932, 1934, 1936–38, 1942 (New York Giants)
Harmon Killebrew 6 1959, 1962–64, 1967, 1969 (Washington Senators/Minnesota Twins)

see note1

League leader in home runs, 3 or more consecutive seasons

Player Titles Seasons & Teams
Ralph Kiner 7 1946-52 Pittsburgh
Babe Ruth 6 1926-31 New York (AL)
Harry Davis 4 1904-07 Philadelphia (AL)
Frank Baker 4 1911-14 Philadelphia (AL)
Babe Ruth 4 1918-19 Boston (AL); 20-21 New York (AL)
Gavvy Cravath 3 1913-15 Philadelphia (NL)
Gavvy Cravath 3 1917-19 Philadelphia (NL)
Hack Wilson 3 1926-28 Chicago (NL)
Chuck Klein 3 1931-33 Philadelphia (NL)
Harmon Killebrew 3 1962-64 Minnesota
Mike Schmidt 3 1974-76 Philadelphia (NL)
Ken Griffey, Jr. 3 1997-99 Seattle
Alex Rodriguez 3 2001-03 Texas

see note1

League leader in home runs, three decades

Player Decade and teams
Babe Ruth 1919 (Boston Red Sox), 20–21, 23–24, 26–31 (New York Yankees)

League leader in home runs, both leagues

Player League, team and year
Sam Crawford National League (Cincinnati Reds (1901)), American League (Detroit Tigers (1908))
Fred McGriff National League (Toronto Blue Jays (1989)), American League (San Diego Padres (1992))
Mark McGwire American League (Oakland Athletics (1987, 1996)), National League (St. Louis Cardinals (1998–99))

League leader in home runs, three different teams

Player Teams and years
Reggie Jackson Oakland Athletics (1973, 1975), New York Yankees (1980), California Angels (1982)

Four home runs by an individual in one game

Player [36] Team Date Opponent Venue
Bobby Lowe Boston Beaneaters May 30, 1894 Cincinnati Reds South End Grounds
Ed Delahanty2 Philadelphia Phillies July 13, 1896 Chicago Colts West Side Grounds
Lou Gehrig New York Yankees June 3, 1932 Philadelphia Athletics Shibe Park
Chuck Klein Philadelphia Phillies July 10, 1936 Pittsburgh Pirates Forbes Field
Pat Seerey Chicago White Sox July 18, 1948 Philadelphia Athletics Shibe Park
Gil Hodges Brooklyn Dodgers August 31, 1950 Boston Braves Ebbets Field
Joe Adcock Milwaukee Braves July 31, 1954 Brooklyn Dodgers Ebbets Field
Rocky Colavito Cleveland Indians June 10, 1959 Baltimore Orioles Memorial Stadium
Willie Mays San Francisco Giants April 30, 1961 Milwaukee Braves Milwaukee County Stadium
Mike Schmidt Philadelphia Phillies April 17, 1976 Chicago Cubs Wrigley Field
Bob Horner2 Atlanta Braves July 6, 1986 Montréal Expos Fulton County Stadium
Mark Whiten St. Louis Cardinals September 7, 1993 Cincinnati Reds Riverfront Stadium
Mike Cameron Seattle Mariners May 2, 2002 Chicago White Sox Comiskey Park
Shawn Green Los Angeles Dodgers May 23, 2002 Milwaukee Brewers Miller Park
Carlos Delgado Toronto Blue Jays September 25, 2003 Tampa Bay Devil Rays Skydome

Four consecutive home runs by a team in one game

Team [37][38] Date Opponent Players Pitcher Inn. Venue
Milwaukee Braves[39] Jun. 8, 1961 Cincinnati Reds Eddie Mathews, Hank Aaron
Joe Adcock, Frank Thomas
Jim Maloney (2)
Marshall Bridges
7th Crosley Field
Cleveland Indians[40] Jul. 31, 1963 Los Angeles Angels Woodie Held, Pedro Ramos
Tito Francona, Larry Brown
Paul Foytack 6th Cleveland Stadium
Minnesota Twins[41] May 2, 1964 Kansas City Athletics Tony Oliva, Harmon Killebrew
Bob Allison, Jimmie Hall
Dan Pfister (3)
Vern Handrahan
11th Municipal Stadium
Los Angeles Dodgers[42] Sep. 18, 2006 San Diego Padres Jeff Kent, J.D. Drew
Russell Martin, Marlon Anderson
Jon Adkins (2)
Trevor Hoffman
9th Dodger Stadium
Boston Red Sox[43][44] Apr. 22, 2007 New York Yankees Manny Ramírez, J.D. Drew
Mike Lowell, Jason Varitek
Chase Wright 3rd Fenway Park
Chicago White Sox[45] Aug. 14, 2008 Kansas City Royals Jim Thome, Paul Konerko
Alexi Ramirez, Juan Uribe
Joel Peralta (3)
Robinson Tejada
6th U.S. Cellular Field

240 home runs by a team in one season

HR [46] Team Season
264 Seattle Mariners 1997
260 Texas Rangers 2005
257 Baltimore Orioles 1996
249 Houston Astros 2000
246 Texas Rangers 2001
245 Seattle Mariners 1996
244 Seattle Mariners 1999
244 Toronto Blue Jays 2000
243 Oakland Athletics 1996
242 Chicago White Sox 2004
242 New York Yankees 2004
240 New York Yankees 1961

Fifteen or more career grand slam home runs

Player Grans slams[47] Teams and years
Lou Gehrig 23 New York Yankees (1923–39)
Manny Ramírez 20 Cleveland Indians (1993–2000), Boston Red Sox (2001–2008), Los Angeles Dodgers (2008)
Eddie Murray 19 Baltimore Orioles (1977–88, 1996), Los Angeles Dodgers (1989–91, 1997), New York Mets (1992–93), Cleveland Indians (1994–96), Anaheim Angels (1997)
Willie McCovey 18 San Francisco Giants (1959–73, 1977–80), San Diego Padres (1974–76), Oakland Athletics (1976)
Robin Ventura 18 Chicago White Sox (1989–98), New York Mets (1999–2001), New York Yankees (2002–03), Los Angeles Dodgers (2003–04)
Jimmie Foxx 17 Philadelphia Athletics (1925–35), Boston Red Sox (1936–42), Chicago Cubs (1942, 1944), Philadelphia Phillies (1945)
Ted Williams 17 Boston Red Sox (1939–42, 1946–60)
Babe Ruth 16 Boston Red Sox (1914–19), New York Yankees (1920–34), Boston Braves (1935)
Henry Aaron 16 Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1954–74), Milwaukee Brewers (1975–76)
Dave Kingman 16 San Francisco Giants (1971–74), New York Mets (1975–77, 1981–83), San Diego Padres (1977), California Angels (1977), New York Yankees (1977), Chicago Cubs (1978–80), Oakland Athletics (1984–86)
Alex Rodriguez 16 Seattle Mariners (1994–2000), Texas Rangers (2001–03), New York Yankees (2004–present)

Five or more grand slam home runs in one season

Player GS [48] Team Season
Don Mattingly 6 New York Yankees 1987
Travis Hafner 6 Cleveland Indians 2006
Ernie Banks 5 Chicago Cubs 1955
Jim Gentile 5 Baltimore Orioles 1961
Richie Sexson 5 Seattle Mariners 2006

Notes

  1. Mark McGwire led the American League in home runs in 1987 and 1996. He led the National League in 1998 and 1999. In 1997, he led Major League Baseball in home runs, but led neither the American or National League, as his season was split between the Oakland Athletics and St. Louis Cardinals. If that season had been included, then he was a League Leader for five seasons, four of which were in succession.
  2. Delahanty and Horner are the only players to hit four home runs in a game as a part of a losing effort[49][50].

References

  1. ^ Career home run statistics @ mlb.com
  2. ^ Season HR Statistics @ Baseball-Reference.com
  3. ^ Annual HR leaders @ Baseball-Reference.com
  4. ^ Babe Ruth statistics @ mlb.com
  5. ^ Harmon Killebrew statistics @ mlb.com
  6. ^ Henry Aaron statistics @ mlb.com
  7. ^ Barry Bonds statistics @ mlb.com
  8. ^ Alex Rodriguez statistics @ mlb.com
  9. ^ Ken Griffey, Jr. statistics @ mlb.com
  10. ^ Sammy Sosa statistics @ mlb.com
  11. ^ Mark McGwire statistics @ mlb.com
  12. ^ Jim Thome statistics @ mlb.com
  13. ^ Ralph Kiner statistics @ mlb.com
  14. ^ Duke Snider statistics @ mlb.com
  15. ^ Adam Dunn career statistics, @mlb.com; accessed 1 October 2008
  16. ^ Mike Schmidt statistics @ mlb.com
  17. ^ Jimmie Foxx statistics @ mlb.com
  18. ^ Manny Ramírez statistics @ mlb.com
  19. ^ Frank Robinson statistics @ mlb.com
  20. ^ Willie Mays statistics @ mlb.com
  21. ^ Carlos Delgado statistics @ mlb.com
  22. ^ Lou Gehrig statistics @ mlb.com
  23. ^ Eddie Mathews statistics @ mlb.com
  24. ^ Rafael Palmeiro statistics @ mlb.com
  25. ^ Mike Piazza statistics @ mlb.com
  26. ^ Jeff Bagwell statistics @ mlb.com
  27. ^ Ted Williams statistics @ mlb.com
  28. ^ Reggie Jackson statistics @ mlb.com
  29. ^ Eddie Murray statistics @ mlb.com
  30. ^ Mel Ott statistics @ mlb.com
  31. ^ Willie Stargell statistics @ mlb.com
  32. ^ Dave Winfield statistics @ mlb.com
  33. ^ Billy Williams statistics @ mlb.com
  34. ^ Chipper Jones statistics @ mlb.com
  35. ^ Annual HR leaders @ Baseball-Reference.com
  36. ^ Summaries and Box Scores of 4-Home Run Games @ Baseball-Almanac.com
  37. ^ White Sox hit four straight taters in sixth Scott Merkin, @mlb.com; accessed 15 August 2008
  38. ^ Home Run Records, By ONE team in ONE Game in ONE Inning; Most Consecutively in any inning
  39. ^ Box Score for Mil vs. Cin, 6/8/1961; accessed 15 August 2008
  40. ^ Box Score for LAA vs. Cle, 7/31/1963; accessed 15 August 2008
  41. ^ Box Score for Min vs. KCA, 5/2/1964; accessed 15 August 2008
  42. ^ Box Score for LAD vs. SD, 9/18/2006; accessed 15 August 2008
  43. ^ Box Score for Bos vs NYY 4/22/2007; accessed 15 August 2008
  44. ^ Red Sox hit four consecutive HRs against Yankees, AP, 22 April 2007, @ espn.go.com, accessed 15 August 2008
  45. ^ Chicago White Sox set club record by hitting four consecutive home runs against Royals at Cellular Field, AP, 14 August 2008, @newsday.com; accessed 15 August 2008
  46. ^ Historic Team HR statistics @ mlb.com
  47. ^ Career grand slam statistics @ Baseball-almanac.com
  48. ^ Season grand slam Statistics @ Baseball-Almanac.com
  49. ^ Baseball Almanac boxscore
  50. ^ Retrosheet box score, Expos at Braves July 6, 1986

See also