Baseball Roundtable May Wrap UP … Stats/Stories from May … A No-hitter, A “Maddux,” An Unassisted DP by an Outfielder and More.

It’s June 1, and that means it’s time for Baseball Roundtable’s May Wrap up – a look at the stats and stories that caught The Roundtable’s attention over the past month , as well as The Roundtable’s Players and Pitchers of the Month, Trot Index and more.  Just a few of this month’s highlights that you will find in this post:

  • A four-strikeout inning;
  • Three bases-loaded hit-by-pitches in a single game;
  • A ten-run twelfth inning and a 13-run third inning;
  • A “Maddux”;
  • A three-pitcher no-hitter;
  • An unassisted double play by a left fielder;
  • A five-run inning in which the baseball never got out of the infield; and
  • More.

Read on… and on … and on for all the stats and stories. Let’s start with a look at Baseball Roundtable’s Players and Pitchers of the Month

BASEBALL ROUNDTABLE MAY 2026 PLAYERS/PITCHERS OF THE MONTH

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Player of The Month … Nationals SS CJ Abrams

A tough one here, as no one really  jumped out as the dominant force. Miami SS Otto Lopez led MLB with 37 May hits; Philadelphia DH Kyle Schwarber led MLB with 11 May home runs; LA CF Andy Pages and Reds’ LF JJ Bleday tied for the NL lead with 25 RBI; Nationals’ RF James Wood led MLB with 21 May runs scored; and San Francisco 2B Luis Arreaz led NL batters with at least 25 May at bats with a .340 average for the month.

After much deliberation, I went with Mets’ LF Juan Soto, who (while he did not lead in any of these categories) had the best all-around numbers. Soto went .281-10-21, with 20 runs scored and five steals in May.  His 21 RBI tied for fifth in the NL, his ten long balls were second, his 20 runs scored tied for third and his five steals tied for eleventh. He was one of just three NL players to both score and drive in at least 20 runs in May (the other two were CJ Abrams and Andy Pages).

Honorable Mentions: Miami SS Otto Lopez at .330-1-12 for May. with an MLB-leading 37 May hits; Reds’ LF JJ Bleday tied for the NL lead in RBI (25), with a .301-8-25 line; Phillies’ DH Kyle Schwarber with an MLB-leading 11 May homers (a .243-11-19 stat line …. but I couldn’t get my “old school” mind past his 46 strikeouts versus nine walks); Dodgers’ CF Andy Pages at .266-8-25, with 20 runs scored; Nationals’ SS CJ Abrams at .292-4-21, with 20 runs scored; and Giants’ 2B Luis Arreaz, who hit .340-2-12, with 34 hits and 18 runs scored – and struck out only three times (versus  eight walks).

 

Pitcher of the Month

Tie : Jacob Misiorowski, RHP, Mets & Cristopher Sanchez, LHP, Phillies

The Roundtable has often admitted to being distracted by “bright and shiny things” on the ballfield.  Well, in May, two NL pitchers not only amassed some impressive stats, but also delivered something “bright and shiny.” The Phillies’ Cristopher Sanchez went the entire month (five starts) without surrendering a single run, while the Brewers Jacob Misiorowski not only led MLB in strikeouts, but had a game in which he threw a record (since pitch tracking began in 2008)  57 pitches at 100 MPH+.  Both deserve this recognition.

Cristopher Sanchez

Sanchez’ month of May saw him pitch 39 innings in five starts (averaging 7.8 frames per start) and included a six-hit, complete-game, shutout of the Pirates (six hits, no walks, 13 strikeouts) on May 16.  His final line for the month was 4-0, 0.00.  Yep, he didn’t allow a single runner to reach the plate in five starts.

Sanchez completed at least seven innings in every outing and, as noted earlier, did not surrender a single run. He was second in the NL in strikeouts with 45 (while walking just three batters); second in MLB (among players with at least 25 May  innings pitched) in WHIP (0.72); and  held hitters to a .181 average.  He ended May with an active 44 2/3 consecutive scoreless inning streak (the bright and shiny thing).

Jacob Misiorowski (The Miz)

Drovetochicago, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Let’s lead off with the bright and shiny thing here. Misiorowski continued to bring the heat in historic fashion. On May 25,  he threw a record 57 pitches of 100 MPH+, reaching 102+ MPH on 22 pitches and 103+ on nine. He threw a total of 96 pitches in that outing, which meant 59.3 percent were in triple digits. In the contest, a 5-1 Brewers win over the Cubs, he gave up just two hits and one run, walking one and fanning 12.

For the month, The Miz was 5-0, with a stringy 0.23 earned run average (second only to Sanchez, above). He gave up just one run 38 1/3 innings.  He fanned an MLB-highest 57 batters, walking just six.  His WHIP of 0.52 and batting average against of .109 were the best among MLB pitchers with at least 25 May innings.

Honorable Mentions: The Dodgers’  Shohei Ohtani went 3-1, 1.08 in four May starts, fanning 27 in 25 innings (and leading off a pair of games with home runs as a DH and starting pitcher); The Reds’ Chris Burns was also in the mix at 4-0, 1.19 for May, with 33 strikeouts (versus just eight walks) in 30 1/3 innings and a 0.79 WHIP.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Player of the Month … Nick Kurtz, 1B Athletics

A much easier decision than in the NL here. Kurtz led MLB in May RBI with 26, while hitting .333, with five home runs. In addition, he was the only AL player to record at least 20 runs scored (21) and 20 RBI in the month. His .333 average was the fourth highest among American Leaguers with at least 75 May at bats and his 34 May hits were tied for the league lead. He also tied for the AL lead in May runs scored.  His .456 on-base percentage was second in the AL to Jonathan Aranda (.464) among hitters with at least 75 May at bats and his .556 slugging percentage was sixth among that group. Kurtz got on base in 27 of his 28 May games (included was a portion of a 48-game, on-base streak that ran from April 1 through May 25). He was, in short, an on-base machine.

Honorable Mentions: Rays’ 1B Joseph Aranda hit .374 for the month, MLB’s highest average  MLB among players with at least 75 May at bats. His 34 hits tied for the AL May lead and he hit four homers, drove in 18 runs and scored 17. Yankees’ LF Cody Bellinger went .304-5-23, with 19 runs scored – and walked more times (20) than he struck out (15).

Pitcher of the Month … Cade Smith, RHP, Guardians

Guardians’ closer Cade Smith appeared in 13 games in May and saved 13 (the next best saves total for the month was nine). He put up a 1.32 ERA, 0.73 WHIP and held hitters to a .188 average. Further, he fanned 25 batters in 13 2/3 innings, while walking just one.

Honorable Mentions: Some new names here. The Astros’ Spencer Arrighetti was tough when he had to be. Despite giving up 17 walks and 16 hits in 29 innings, he went 4-1 in five starts, with a stingy 0.93 ERA (lowest in the AL among pitchers with 25 or more innings pitched). Davis Martin of the White Sox went 4-0, 2.05 in five starts and fanned 38 batters in 30 2/3 innings, while walking just six.  His 38 strikeouts were fifth in the AL. The White Sox’ Anthony Kay went 4-0, 2.05 in six starts and Red Sox’ veteran Sonny Gray went 4-0, 2.00 for a team that went 13-14.

 

 

SURPRISE PLAYER OF THE MONTH

Tie: Astros’ RHP Spencer Arrighetti and Guardians’ 2B Travis Bazzana

This month’s Surprise Players are two who have shown potential, but delivered on their potential to a surprising degree in May.  (Side note: I still kind of wish Bazzana was in the lineup for the Savannah Bananas.)

Spencer Arrighetti

Photo: MDGovpics, CC BY 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Arrighetti was a sixth-round draft pick in 2021 (out of the University of Louisiana).  In three college seasons (TCU, Navarro College and the University of Louisiana),  he went 11-8, 4.14. In the minors from 1921-24, Arrighetti went 19-15, 4.36. An early 2024 call up to the Astros produced a 7-13, 4.53 major league stat line (29 games, 28 starts, 171 strikeouts in 145 innings). A thumb injury shortened his 2025 season (he pitched in three minor-league games and seven with the Astros, going 1-5, 5.35 for Houston). So, coming into 2026, his MLB record was 8-18, 4.69 in 36 games/35 starts.

But there had been flashes of potential.  In May of 2024, he pitched six one-run innings in a 1-0 loss to the Rays, fanning a career-high 12 in the process.  He came black six days later to fan 13 in seven innings (two runs) in a 5-4 win over the Red Sox. In fact, he reached double- digit in strikeouts four times that season.

Arrighetti started 2026 in the minors, but injuries to the Houston rotation led to his call up on April 15. And it’s been lights out since. In April, he went 3-0, 2.00 in three starts and, in May, he surprised with a 4-1, 0.93 record. Wow.

Travis Bazzana, 2B Guardians

Photo: Erik Drost, CC BY 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

The rookie, who made his MLB debut on April 28, was fifth in the AL in  May base hits (32), while putting up a .311-3-11 line, with 13 runs scored and eight steals.  Not a total surprise, of course, he was a first-round, first-overall  draft choice in 2024 –  out of Oregon State University (where he hit .360-45-165, with 66 steals in three seasons … 184 games). Still, in three minor-league seasons, he hit .252-14-61, with 25 steals in 135 games.  When he was called up this season (he made his MLB debut April 28), he was hitting .287-2-10, with eight steals at Triple-A. After  13 MLB games (as of May 12), he was hitting just .195. Then, from May 13 to the end of the month, he stroked at a .353-2-5 pace. Looks like he made the adjustment.

Honorable Mention: Marlins SS Otto Lopez hit .260 over his first three MLB seasons (268 games in 2021-22 & 2024-25). However, he has turned it on in 2026. He hit .322-3-12 with five steals in March/April and a surprising .330-1-12 in May – leading MLB in May base hits.  (Side note: He did hit an even .300 over eight minor-league seasons, so maybe this isn’t that much of a surprise.

 

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THE TROT INDEX … A REGULAR BASEBALL ROUNDTABLE FEATURE

Through May  31,  35.3% of the MLB season’s plate appearances ended in a trot (back to the dugout, around the bases, to first base). We’re talking about strikeouts, home runs, walks, hit by pitch and catcher’s interference – all outcomes that are, basically, devoid of action on the base paths or in the field. Here’s the breakout: strikeouts (22.0%); walks (9.2%); home runs (2.8%); HBP (1.2%); catcher’s interference (less than 1%). 

The 35.0% is up a bit from  the 34.5% through May in 2025. I’ve also looked into full-year Trot Index figures for the years I have been a fan: 34.9% in 2024; 30.3% in 2010; 29.9% in 2000; 31.7% in 1990; 23.1% in 1980; 27.0% in 1970; 25.1% in 1960; and 22.8% in 1950.

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The biggest surprise in those numbers may be the surging White Sox, who finished second in the NL in runs scored and tied for first in May home runs; while finishing in the middle of the pack in ERA and runs all0wed (eighth and seventh, respectively).  They were led on offense by 1B Munetaka Murakami (.244-8-18 for the month); SS Colson Montgomery (.235-7-15); and 3B MIguel Vargas (.250-7-19). Their pitching got a boost from Anthony Kay (4-0, 1.95) and Davis Martin (4-0, 2.05). Coming into the season, the pair had a combined MLB record of 14-23.  This year, they have  combined for 13 wins against just two losses.

On the other end of the spectrum, the Rockies continue  to struggle, with  a May ERA of 6.77 and an offense that was eleventh in the NL in May runs.

——-Team Statistical Leaders for May  2026 ———-

RUNS SCORED

National League – Nationals (149); Pirates (148); Dodgers (147)

American League – Yankees (152); White Sox (146); Orioles (130)

The fewest runs in May were scored by the Tigers (81). In the National League, it was the Padres (88).  The only other teams scoring fewer than 100 May runs were the Cardinals (92) and Royals (95).   

AVERAGE

National League – Pirates (.264); Giants (.260); Dodgers (.252)

American League – Rays (.270); Red Sox (.265); Yankees (.258)

The lowest team average for May belonged to the Padres at .200 – the Tigers were at the bottom of the AL at .204.

HOME RUNS

National League – Braves (41); Nationals (40); Phillies (39)

American League – White Sox (42); Mariners (42); Astros (39)

The fewest home runs in May were hit by the Brewers, Diamondbacks and Tigers (18).

TOTAL BASES

National League – Giants (440); Nationals (431); Pirates (407)

American League – Yankees (421); White Sox (401); Mariners (387)

The Nationals led MLB in May Slugging Percentage at .453.  The Yankees led the AL (.449)

DOUBLES

National League – Giants (68);  Nationals (61); D-backs (53)

American League – Twins (55); Yankees (53); Royals (50)

TRIPLES

National League – D-backs (7); Giants (7); Nationals (6)

American League – Rays (6); Red Sox (6); Yankees (6)

The White Sox were the only team with zero triples in May.

STOLEN BASES

National League – Marlins (32); Phillies (26); Padres (26); Nationals (25)

American League – Guardians (32); Yankees (23); Mariners (21); Red Sox (21)

The Giants stole the fewest sacks in May with seven – in just nine attempts.

Six of the top seven teams in May steals were in the NL.

WALKS DRAWN

National League – Cubs (125);  Dodgers (116); Pirates (113)

American League – Guardians (123); Yankees (122); Athletics (110)

The Rays led MLB in May on-base percentage at .348. The Pirates led the NL at .346. The Padres had MLB’s lowest May OBP at (.276).  The Astros anchored the AL at .287.

BATTER’S STRIKEOUTS

National League – Reds (253); Pirates (249); Cubs (234)

American League – Angels (255); Tigers (253); Orioles (252); Twins (252)

Rays’ batters fanned the fewest times in May (182). The Cardinals fanned the fewest times in the NL at 190.

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EARNED RUN AVERAGE

National League – Brewers (2.52); Dodgers (2.95); D-backs (2.98)

American League – Mariners (3.23) Red Sox (3.24); Yankees (3.31)

The Rockies had the highest May ERA at 6.77.  The Orioles had the highest ERA in the AL at 5.10. The only other team at five-plus was the Reds at 5.51.

STRIKEOUTS

National League – Mets (262) ; Brewers (261); Phillies (260)

American League – Guardians (270); Mariners (252); Red Sox (248)

The Brewers averaged an MLB-best 10.13 strikeouts per nine innings in May. The Guardians averaged an AL-best 9.35.  Eight teams averaged nine whiffs per nine or better.

FEWEST WALKS SURRENDERED

National League –   Phillies (61); Dodgers (66); D-backs (66)

American League – Rays (68); Mariners (75); Red Sox (77)

The Phillies walked an MLB-lowest 2.19 batters per nine innings in May.  The Angels walked an MLB-worst 4.81 batters per nine frames.

SAVES

National League – Nationals (12); Phillies (12): Brewers (10)

American League – Guardians (14); Rays (13); Twins (10)

The Tigers  blew the most saves in May – eleven (in 13 opportunities).

Walks+ Hits/Innings Pitched (WHIP)

National League – Dodgers (1.02); Brewers (1.06); D-backs (1.10)

American League:  Mariners (1.13); White Sox (1.16); Red Sox (1.20)

Bonus Stats:

  • The Reds gave up an MLB-high 51 home runs in May. The Brewers gave up an MLB-low 12 home runs.
  • Brewers’ pitchers held opponents to an MLB-low .195 average in May. The Rockies’ staff was touched for an MLB-high .311 averag

——MAY 2026 HIGHLIGHTS —- 

 

May 2 Saw The End of Two Impressive Streaks (All Good Things Must Come To An End)

Always Wanted To Be A Hit Man

On May 2, the Diamondbacks’ Ildemaro Vargas was held hitless for the first time this season – ending his season-opening hitting streak at 24 games. During his streak, Vargas hit .404 (36-for-94), with six doubles, two triples, six home runs and 21 RBI. (Side note: Vargas also hit safely in his last three games of 2025).

We visited Vargas’ history in the March/April Wrap, but here’s a recap.  A true journeyman, utility player, in his first nine MLB seasons (2017-25) Vargas: 1) played for the Diamondbacks, Nationals, Cubs, Twins and Pirates; 2) appeared in 174 games at 3B, 145 at 2B, 48 at SS, 29 in LF, five on the mound and two in RF – plus 104 games as a pinch-hitter, 14 as a pinch-runner and seven as a DH. In 2021 alone, he took the field for the Cubs, Pirates and Diamondbacks.

In those first nine MLB seasons, he appeared in an average of 51 MLB games per season, never reaching 100 games.  (In seven of those nine, he also spent time in the minors). Over those nine seasons, Vargas hit .249-20-145 over 458 games.  Side Note:  Vargas also has a dozen seasons in the Venezuelan Winter League on his baseball resume.  And, true to his versatile history, this season, during his 24-game opening hitting streak, he  appeared at 1B, 2B, 3B, SS,  LF and DH.

Vargas ended May with a .295-7-37 line on the season.  l(Oh, for those who like to know such things, the longest season-opening hitting streak belongs to the Tigers’ Ron LeFlore at 30 (1976).

Nothing Beat A Leisurely Walk In the Park

Also, on May 2, the Athletics’ 1B Nick Kurtz did not draw a walk – ending a streak of 20 consecutive games with a free pass (dating back to April 1) . Kurtz did  go two-for-five ion the game (an A’s 14-6 loss to the Guardians).  Kurtz’ line during the walk streak was: (17-for-69) .246-5-13, with 25 walks, 26 strikeouts and a .447 on-base percentage.

Rookie Rules

On July 25, 2025, Nick Kurtz became the first rookie and youngest player ever (22 years-135 days) to hit four home runs in an MLB game.  In the contest, a 15-3 Athletics’ win at Houston, Kurtz went six-for-six, with four home runs, a double, a single, six runs scored and eight RBI. Note: He also tied the MLB record for total bases in a game at 19 (also accomplished by the Dodgers’ Shawn Green on May 23, 2002).

Ramirez Rolls A 300

On May  2, Guardian’s 3B Jose Ramirez swiped third base in the fifth inning of a Cleveland 14-6 win over the Athletics (right after hitting a two-run double to give the Guardians a 4-3 lead). The steal was the 300th of Ramirez’ 14-season MLB career (all with the Indians/Guardians) – and, at the time, he was also just nine homers shy of 300 … which, when he gets there, will make him just the ninth MLB player to reach 300-300. He is also now second on the Guardians’ franchise stolen base list, trailing only Kenny Lofton’s 452. (Side note: At the time of the 300th swipe, Ramirez was 13-for-13 in steal attempts  this season.) Ramirez ended May with eight homers on the season and 293 for his career – and a league-leading 20 steals (307 for his career).

Fireworks During The Game, Not After

On May 2, the Pirates toppled the Reds 17-7 (thankfully in Pittsburgh). By the end of the fourth inning:

  • the score was 15-3;
  • the Pirates had collected 10 hits and 10 walks;
  • every Pirate in the starting lineup had at least one RBI.

Ultimately, the Pirate plated 17 runs on 19 hits and 11 walks and, surprisingly (in today’s game) not a single home run.

In the fourth inning, after Pirates’ CF Oneil Cruz struck out to open the frame, Reds’ pitchers walked seven consecutive batters – enabling the Pirates to plate five runs in the inning, without single base hit. In fact, without a ball leaving the infield (the seven walks were followed by two groundouts).  The Pirates were just the third team to issue seven consecutive walks in an inning (August 25, 1909, White Sox & May 25, 1983 Braves).

Ouch! But Worth It!

On May 6, Angels’ DH Jorge Soler had an unusual day at the plate in the Angels’ 8-4 victory over the White Sox in Anaheim. Soler’s perfect day “at bat” consisted of a single, two walks and a hit-by-pitch in four plate appearances. It was the HBP that grabbed The Roundtable’s attention.   It was one of three HBP in the game and they all came with the bases loaded. (Elias Sports Bureau reported it was the first time in at least 70 years that an MLB game featured three bases-loaded plunkings).

Soler’s HBP was the first of the game.   It came in the fourth inning The Angels were up 5-1, there were two outs,  and the Halos had loaded the bases on a single and two walks off starter Noah Schultz. Osvaldo Bido came on in relief of Schultz and plunked Soler on a 1-1 pitch, forcing in a run and leaving the sacks full.  On the very next pitch, Bido hit Angels’  RF Jo Adell forcing in another run.  Then Osvaldo Bido retired 3B Oswald Peraza (a battle of the Ozzies) on an 0-1 grounder to first.

The score stayed at 7-1 until the seventh inning, when the Angels loaded the bases on a single and a pair of walks (sandwiched around a flyout and a bunt ground out) off Brent Suter. Drew Pomeranz came on in relief (and like the White Sox’ Bido before him) proceeded (on a 1-2 pitch)  to hit the first batter he faced (LF Sam Antonacci) forcing in a run. He then struck out slugging 1B Munetaka Murakami to end the frame.

Mason Miller Brings It

Let’s face it, Padres’ reliever Mason Miller has some nasty “stuff.”  At the end of May, he led the NL  with 17 saves, had a 0.72 ERA and had fanned 49 batters in 25 innings. One of the highlights of his month came in a nerve-wracking frame on May 9, when he became the first pitcher to fan four batters in an inning in 2026. (It’s not that rare an event, Baseball-Almanac.com lists 108 instances in which a pitcher fanned four batters in an inning – but Miller made it especially interesting by loading the bases in the process.)  It happened in the ninth inning of a Padres’ 4-2 win over the Cardinals in St. Louis. Miller was brought in to start the inning and protect the two-run lead.  It when like this:

  • Number-five hitter 3B Nolan Gorman – Five-pitch walk;
  • SS Masyn Winn – Strike out on a 3-2 pitch;
  • CF Nathan Church – Five-pitch walk;
  • LF Thomas Saggese – Strike out on three pitches;
  • C Yohei Pozo – Fans on an 0-2 wild pitch, reaches first base, Church goes to second, Gorman to third;
  • 2B JJ Wetherholt – Fans on a 1-2 pitch.

I do love coincidences and, coincidentally, the last Padres’ pitcher to fan four batters in an inning was in the dugout –  current Padres manager Craig Stammen (in 2021).

A Maddux … It Can Still Happen

Okay, given today’s game, pitching a “Maddux” – a complete game shutout of 100 or fewer pitches – is a rarity. On  May 12, in a Twins 3-0 win over the Marlins – Minnesota’s’ Bailey Ober did just that. Ober needed just 89 pitches to shut down and shut out the Marlins over nine innings (two hits, no walks, seven strikeouts).  For more on Ober’s Maddux and Madduxes in general, click here.

MLB Debut … A Walk In The Park, And Then Some

On May 12, Mets’ 21-year-old CF A.J. Ewing made his MLB debut in New York (versus the Tigers), batting in the eight-hole.  His first game in the majors went like this:

  • Second Inning – Battled for a seven-pitch walk;
  • Fourth Inning – Fly out;
  • Sixth Inning – Six-pitch walk, stolen base, later scored;
  • Seventh Inning – RBI triple, later scored;
  • Eighth Inning – RBI single.

Why a highlight?  In the spirit of #InBaseballWeCountEverything, Anthony DiComo reported – in  an MLB.com article – that Ewing is the only player in the Modern Era to record three walks, a triple, a stolen base and multiple RBI in his MLB debut. Ewing had hit .339-2-11, with 17 steals in 30 2026 minor-league games (AA & AAA) before his call up. In four minor-league seasons, he hit .290-15-118, with 101 steals in 251 games. (He was  drafted, right out of high school, in the fourth round of the 2023 MLB Draft). At the end of May, his MLB line was .238-1-6.

Seeing Double Is Lucky On The 13th

On May 13, Rockies’ LF Jake McCarthy completed one of those “you-never-know-what-you’ll- see-at-a-ballgame” plays. In the bottom of the first frame of a Rockies’ 10-4 win over the Pirates, the leftfielder turned an unassisted double play.  Ikea would have been proud of his “put-it-together-yourself” initiative.

It started with Pirates’ leadoff hitter and CF Oneil Cruz on second with one out and  Pittsburgh LF Bryan Reynolds at the plate.  Reynolds lined a first-pitch changeup from Jose Quintana to shallow left-center, which spurred a lot of movement. McCarthy was coming in fast toward the infield to make the catch, Cruz was running toward third on the pitch. As McCarthy made the catch, he saw Cruz would have no chance to beat him to second base, so McCarthy “cruised” into the infield and stepped on the keystone bag for the force out and seven-unassisted twin killing.

Finally, The Light At The End Of The Tunnel Game

On May 15th, the Diamondbacks’ 37-year-old righty Merrill Kelly drew the unenviable assignment of starting against the Rockies in hitter-friendly Coors Field. Not only that, hitters in general had not been kind to Kelly in this, his  MLB season.  His 2026 record going into the game was 2-3, 7.62. At this point, he had made 177 MLB starts (over 7+ MLB seasons) without recording a complete game. The stars did not seem aligned in his favor.

Kelly, however,  came through with a nine-inning gem.  A complete game, four-hit, 9-1 win. Per Elias Sport Bureau, this made Kelly the second-oldest pitcher to twirl his first MLB complete game.

For those who like to know such things, the oldest was the Senators’ Connie Marrero, who threw his first complete game (May 21, 1950) at age 39. Curveballer Marrero, notably was in his first MLB season (he had been a star in Cuba) and was making just his second MLB start when he went the distance in a 6-2 win over the Tigers. Marrero pitched in five MLB seasons, going 39-40, 3.67 with 51 complete games in 94 starts (118 total appearances).

Shutouts, Always A Highlight These Days

On May 16, Phillies southpaw Cristopher Sanchez picked up his fifth win of the season (5-2, 1.82), as the Phils topped the Pirates 6-0 in Pittsburgh.  It makes the highlights because it was also his first complete game of the season – and a shutout.  (At the end of May, there were only four complete-game shutouts in MLB this season).  Sanchez gave up six hits, while walking none and fanning 13.

Ghost Runner.  We Don’t Need No Stinkin’ Ghost Runner, (For Blazing Saddles fans.)

On May 18, the Mets and Nationals went into the twelfth-inning (in Washington D.C.) tied at 6-6. The Mets, of course, started the top of the twelfth with a runner placed at second base. That proved to be an unnecessary move, as the Mets went on to score ten runs in the inning  (on their way to a 16-7 win).   It all started innocently enough, with Mets’  LF Tyrone Taylor “placed” at second base and C Hayden Senger sacrificing him to third.  What followed was: single; single; intentional walk; bunt single; single; single; pitching change (names withheld to protect the innocent); single; flyout; single; double; double; foul out. Note: Nine Mets, players scored in the frame.

For those who like to know such things:  The most runs scored in an extra-frame is 12, by the Texas Rangers in the 15th-inning of a July 3, 1983 win over the Athletics (in Oakland).  In that one (there, of course, was no placed runner to start the frame), the Rangers collected  five singles, three doubles and two walks (and were aided by an Athletics’ error and wild pitch). As in the Mets’ recent ten-run twelfth, those runs scored without the benefit of a home run.

Ouch! What A Turn Around

On May 18, Athletic righthander J.T. Ginn, making his 30th MLB start (42nd appearance) was rolling along – seemingly headed for his first complete game, first shutout – AND a no-hitter. Going into the bottom of the ninth, he held a 1-0  lead over the hometown Angels.  He had thrown 99 pitchers (62 strikes) and had allowed just two base runners (walk, hit by pitch).  Ginn had fanned ten and gone to a three-ball count on only two batters.  Wow!

In the ninth inning, things went south.  Angel’s second baseman Adam Frazier (batting in the nine-hole) singled on an 0-2 pitch leading off the inning and was replaced by pinch runner Jose Siri (no relation to Apple’s Seri).  SS Zach Neto was up next and hit an 2-0 pitch beyond the centerfield wall for a 2-0 walk-off Angels’ win. So, for Ginn – a complete game, but no no-no and a loss.

Gotta Love Those Baseball Nicknames

On May 19, Jhostynxon  Garcia, acquired by the Pirates (from the Red Sox) in a December trade, made his Pirates debut, starting in RF and batting sixth as the Buccos took on the Cardinals in St. Louis.  (Garcia , a top-100 prospect, went one-for-seven in an August 2025 call up – five games – with the Red Sox).

Garcia makes the highlights because of his nickname “Password” – based on how his first name mirrors those computer-generated random passwords. Takes me back to the Blue Jays’ Marc Rzepczynski, whose last name earned him the nickname “Scrabble.”  It also gives me a chance to direct you – click here – to a past Roundtable post detailing my All- Nickname(best and worst) MLB teams.

Grand Slam … But You have To Run For it

On May 19, as the Nationals topped the Mets 9-6, Nationals’ RF and leadoff hitter James Wood gave the hometown crowd a thrill with a second-inning Grand Slam (his first career MLB GS).  Neither Wood nor the crowd, however, get to savor a trot around the bases.  Wood toured the “three bags and a plate” in just 15.2 seconds.  Yep, that first Grand Slam was an inside-the-parker. It came on the first pitch (a sweeper) of Wood’s second at bat of the game (he had a single in the first inning) against Mets’ starter Noah McLean (the Nat’s trailed 4-0 at the time). Woods hit the ball to deep left center, with Mets’ LF Nick Morabito and CF Tyrone Taylor  intent on running  it down.  The ball bounced off Morabito’s glove and rolled into center, and he slammed into the LF wall and fell to the warning track. Long story short, as Morabito tracked the ball down, Wood toured the bases in those 15.2 seconds and slid head first into home, with his first (well-earned) MLB Grand Slam.

A Shohei Highlight … And, then, A Repeat

On May 20, Shohei Ohtani once again showed why he is “The Show.”  Batting leadoff (DH) and pitching that night, he opened the game in San Diego by belting the first pitch (a four-seam fastball) from Padres’ starter Randy Vazquez, who came into the game 5-1, 2.58 on the season) for his eighth home run and 26th RBI of 2026. He then went on to pitch five innings of no-run, three-hit ball, earning his fourth win and lowering  his season earned run average to 0.73.  The Dodgers prevailed 4-0. In the spirit of  #InBaseballWeCountEverything, it was the seventh time Ohtani had recorded a scoreless start and gone yard in the same MLB game, setting a new Modern Era record for that combination. (He had been tied with Bob Gibson at six.)  In same vein, even more of a unicorn – per an MLB.com article by Sonja Chen – it was the first regular-season, game-opening leadoff home run by a pitcher in MLB  history.

On May 27, apparently to show that May 20 leadoff home run as a starting pitcher was a no fluke, Ohtani did it again – this time in Colorado.   He opened the top of the first by striking out Rockies’ leadoff hitter, CF Jake McCarthy, as part of a 1-2-3 inning. Then, leading off for the Dodgers in the bottom of the first, he homered to CF on a 1-1 pitch from Tomoyuki Sugano.   It was Ohtani’s ninth homer of the 2026 season. Ohtani did pretty well on the mound, too, picking up his fifth victory (one loss) with six innings of no-hit ball (four walks, seven strikeouts).

There has been one post-season instance of a pitcher going deep while leading off a game for his team.  Whose name goes on that one? You guessed it. Leading off the bottom of the first in Game Four of 2025’s National League Championship Series, Ohtani smacked a 3-2 pitch from the Brewers’ Jose Quintana for a homer to deep right. And, to add a cherry to the top of that sundae: Ohtani went three-for-three, with three homers in the 5-3 Dodgers’ win – and also pitched six shutout innings. Sho-time indeed.

Feel Good Story Of The Month

How can you not love this game?  Bryan Torres surely does. On May 23, Torres made his MLB debut with the Cardinals … in his 11th pro season and 914th game as a professional ballplayer. Torres, signed out of Puerto Rico, started his professional career in 1915 (as a 17-year-old) with the Brewers-affiliated squad in the Dominican Summer league.  His journey to the majors included time in three different farm systems (Brewers, Cardinals and Giants), the Puerto Rican and Dominican Winter Leagues,  as well as in the independent American Association.  He donned the uniforms of the Pioneer League Helena Brewers and Rocky Mountain Vibes;  Arizona League Brewers; Puerto Rican Winter League Gigantes de Carolina and Criollos de Caguas; Northern League Richmond Flying Squirrels; American Association Milwaukee Milkmen; the Puerto Rican team in the Caribbean Series; Texas League Springfield Cardinals; International League Memphis Red Birds; Dominican Winter League Toro del Este; and the Puerto Rican team in the  World Baseball Classic.

When he was called up to the Redbirds, he was hitting .336-2-16 after 36 games at Triple-A Memphis.

Torres not only made his debut that day, he played in two games  … a split doubleheader against the Reds in Cincinnati. And, it proved an MLB debut day worth the wait.  In Game One, seven proved a lucky number for Torres.  He started in LF (seven on your scorecard), batting seventh. He got his first plate appearance in the third inning and worked a six-pitch walk (first MLB walk, first MLB time on base). In the fourth  inning,  he logged his first MLB at bat and collected his first MLB hit (a single to right) and later scored his first MLB run as Ivan Herrera hit into a ground ball double play.  More firsts were yet to come. After grounding out in the sixth and flying  out in the seventh, Torres collected his first MLB home run and first MLB RBIs in the ninth (a two-run shot.) Not a bad first MLB game: two-for-four, one run scored, two RBI, a home run – and his Cardinals won 8-1. Oh, and it was another first – his first MLB day game.

About three-and-a half hours later, another first for Torres … his first MLB night game. He got another  start in LF, batting seventh. In this one, he went one-for-four with a walk (and his first MLB strikeout). The Cardinals lost that one 7-6. Torres closed out May with  a  .273-1-3 line.

On May 23 … A Bit Of Rare Air

Royals’ righty Stephen Kolek pitched his second career MLB complete game (in 23 starts/65 appearances over three seasons). It was also his second MLB shutout. Kolek gave up just four hits and one walk and fanned only two batters (that is also a bit rare for a complete game these days) in the 5-0 win over the Mariners.  The outing ran Kolek’s 2026 record to 3-0, 2.77 in four starts.

Kolek’s gem was  one of seven MLB complete games and four single-pitcher shutouts so far this  season.  (In 2025, there were a total of 13 complete-game shutouts and Kolek tied for the MLB lead with one.)  By comparison, in 1968, the Cardinal’s Bob Gibson had 13 shutouts on his own, MLB saw 20 players toss five or more shutouts and 99 pitchers tossed at least one shutout. Even in 1969 – after MLB shrank the strike zone in response to “The Year of the Pitcher” (1968),  it took nine shutouts to lead MLB (Denny McLain),  eight pitchers fashioned at least five whitewashings and 105 pitchers threw at least one shutout. Oh, how times have changed.

Run, Corbin Run

On May 24, as the Diamondbacks topped the Rockies 9-1 in Arizona, D-backs’ RF Corbin Carroll had a good day – four-for-four, with a run scored, two RBI and two triples. It was his fifth multiple-triple game in four-plus MLB season.  Note: In his first three full MLB seasons (2023-25), Carroll has led the  NL in triples (with 10, 14 and 17, respectively) – and he currently leads the league with eight 2026 three-baggers. Notably, Corbin tied for the MLB lead in triples in 2024 and stood alone atop MLB in 2025. If Carroll leads MLB in triples again this year, he would be the first player to lead MLB in three-baggers in three consecutive seasons and also the first player to lead the NL in triples in four consecutive seasons (like Carroll, the Cardinals’ Garry Templeton led the NL in triples three straight seasons … 1977-79).   Note: The White Sox’ Lance Johnson holds the MLB record for the most consecutive seasons leading his league (as opposed to MLB overall) in triples at four (1991-94).  Sam Crawford holds the record for leading his league in triples over a career at six (over 19 seasons), as well as the MLB career record for triples at 309. Ty Cobb has the record for the most career multi-triple games at 17 (over 24 seasons). Carroll has some targets (near- and long-term) to shoot for.

A No-No … And Santa Delivers

On May 25, Astros’ 23-year-old righty Alimber Santa made his MLB debut in what would normally be a no-stress situation. After all, his Astros were up 9-0 as Santa took the mound to open the eighth.  There was a catch, however, the Astros’ Tatsuya Imai (six innings) and Steven Okert (one inning) had combined to hold the Rangers hitless through seven (five walks, three strikeouts). So, Santa was asked to deliver not only a hold, but also to preserve a shutout and a no-hitter. He was up to the task, pitching two 1-2-3 innings (three groundouts, two lineouts, one strikeout) to complete the first no-hitter of 2026. Coincidently, the last no hitter (before May 25) came on September 3, 2024 and like this on , it was a three-pitcher no-no, started by a Japanese-born pitcher (Shota Imanaga).

For those who like to know such things:  Of MLB’s 327 recorded no-hitters (regular and post-season, per MLB.com and Baseball-Almanac.com, only 22 were combined no-hitters – and 14 of those have occurred post-2000 (since 2003 to be exact).

The Miz

Jacob Misiorowski (The Miz) just keeps bringing the heat (and making these highlights).  On May 25, in his start against the Cardinals, the Brewers’ 243-year-old righthander fanned 12 batters over seven innings – giving up just two hits, one walk and one run – in a 5-1 Brewers’ win.  AND, he threw 57 of his 96 pitches at 100 mph+. That’s the most triple-digit pitches in a game since pitch tracking began in 2008. In the process, he also became the first MLB pitcher to reach 100 strikeouts this season (doing it in 64 innings).

Kurtz Got It On (a lot)!

May 26 was a red-letter day for A’s 1B Nick Kurtz. Red, of course, signals “stop” and May 26 marked the day Mariners’ pitchers stopped Kurtz’ remarkable 48-game streak of getting on base. As the Athletics lost to the Mariners 4-1,  Kurtz went zero-for-four with three strikeouts. It was the first time opponents kept him off the base paths for an entire game since March 31.  In the 48-game on-base streak, Kurtz went  53-for-172 (.304), with eight homers and 37 RBI.  He also drew 48 walks over the 48 games (.464 on-base percentage) and, within the on-base streak, he had a 20-game streak in which he drew at least one walk in every game (April 19 through  May 1).

For those who like to know such things, the record for the most consecutive MLB games reaching base is held by Ted Williams (84 games … July 1 through September 27, 1949).    Williams went 112-for-302 in his streak (.371), with 24 home runs and 80 RBI (as well as 92 walks for a .518 OBP). The record for consecutive games with a walk is 22 (Ray Cullenbine, Tigers … walks were first tracked in the AL in 1913 and the NL in 1910).

Recovering From An Unfortunate Start
White Sox’ 25-year-old righty David Sandlin made his MLB debut against the Twins on  May 27 (in Chicago). He had a bit of a rough start, giving up a home run to Twins’  leadoff hitter Byron Buxton on just his second MLB pitch (the first was a ball). He settled in nicely after that, retiring the next 18 batters he faced (before being relieved to open the seventh). He got the win and gave up just the one hit and run, while fanning four and walking none.  Sandlin was an 11th round pick in the 2022 Draft (out of the University of Oklahoma.)

A Diversion

Bob Gibson and Bert Blyleven both gave up a home run to the first MLB batters they ever faced. (The only two Hall of Famers to do do.)

 They Call Them The Streaks

This season, the Cubs have already run off two 10-game winning streaks (April 14—24 & April 28-May 8), as well as a ten-game losing streak (May 16-May 26). #InBaseballWeCountEverything:  The Elias Sports Bureau reported that the 2017 Dodgers are the only other team in AL/NL history to have two double-digit winning streaks and a double-digit losing streak in the same season.

The Cubs also had a streak of 15 consecutive wins at Wrigley Field. The home winning streak began on April 17 and ended  with a Wrigley Field loss to the Brewers on May 18. Notably, the Cubs closed out May with a still active six-game home losing streak.

The Gate To Home Plate Is Locked

On May 27, Phillies’ southpaw Cristopher Sanchez (Don’t look it up, it’s Cristopher without an H) picked up his sixth win of the season (6-2, 1.47) – and in doing so supplanted one of the most well-known names in Phillies’ and MLB history. Sanchez threw seven scoreless innings (six hits, no walks, nine strikeouts) as the Phils topped the Padres 3-0 in San Diego.  Why a highlight?  The last time Sanchez gave up a run was in the first inning of a game on April 30. Since then, he has crafted 44 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings, now the longest (and still active) scoreless streak in Phillies’ history. Who did Sanchez supplant in the Phillies’ record book? The 41-inning streak tossed by Hall of Famer Grover Cleveland Alexander in his 1911 rookie season. Sanchez now holds MLB’s seventh-longest (Live Ball Era) scoreless streak.  The ultimate target?  Orel Hershiser’s 59 consecutive scoreless frames in 1988.

The New M&M Boys

During the month of May the White Sox bashed an MLB-leading 42 home runs, with 1B Munetaka Murakami (8), SS Colson Montgomery (7) and 3B Miguel Vargas (7) leading the way. Notably Murakami and Montgomery  homed in the same game twice during the month, bring the total games in which they both homered to eight on the season.  That put them on a pace to homer together in in 22 games this season.  For a point of reference, in 1961, the Bronx Bombers M&M boys (Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle) set the record for players homering in the same game at 14.

Side note: Murakami suffered a hamstring injury on May 29. He is expected to miss four-to-six weeks, so the new M&M boys  may see their chances of topping the 1961 M&M boys’ record slip away.  

The Drought Ends

It finally happened: Fifty-six games and 207 at bats into the 2026 MLB season,   Fernando Tatis, Jr. (who averaged a home run every 4.4 games and every 17.1 at bats from his debut season of  2019 through 2025) hit his first dinger of 2026.   It came on May 30, the fifth inning of his Padres’ 9-4 loss to that Nationals.  It was a 451-foot blast toi left-center off Foster Griffin – on a 1-0 pitch after Tatis had faked a bunt on the first pitch.

It Just Keeps On Happening

Those who make their way through this monthly highlight know that The Roundtable seems to be featuring a lot of players who go deep on their Bobblehead Day/Night.  Well, it happened again.  On May 30, on a day when the White Sox were holding a “Shared Bobblehead Giveaway” featuring catchers Edgar Quero and Kyle Teel (and Quero’s wife Maria was tossing out the first pitch), Quero (catcher, not wife) hit a solo homer in the seventh inning of a 7-1 win over the Tigers. It was just his second homer of the 2026 season.

(Number) One For Two

On May 30, the Mets’ battery of P Christian Scott and C Hayden Singer  notched a pair of firsts. Scott picked up his first MLB win (tossing five innings of one run ball, fanning eight) and Senger popped his first MLB home run in the seventh inning.  It was Scott’s 16th MLB appearance (all starts) and Senger’s 39th MLB game.  Oh, the Mets won 6-1.

Isn’t Thirteen, Just 31 Backwards?

Threes were good to the Yankees as May came to a close. In inning number three, on May 31, in a game that would eventually take three hours-and-one minute, the Yankees poured across 13 runs before the opposing A’s managed to get out number-three.  In addition, the first out wasn’t recorded until the 13th batter in the inning came to the plate. In fact, the Yankees had put across ten runs before the first out in the inning. The Yankees sent 18 batters to the plate and collected 11 hits  – eight singles, two doubles and one triple.  The Bronx Bombers also drew four walks and – adding insult to injury –  stole four bases in the inning. DH Ben Rice was the “star” of the inning, with a two-run double and a two-run triple in two at bats.

Weirdly, it was the only inning in which the Yankees scored in the 13-8 win. In fact, it was the only inning in which they recorded a base hit. Theo DeRosa, in an MLB.com report, indicated it is the most runs an MLB team has ever scored in a game in which all their runs came in the same inning.

Ronald Acuna, Jr. Ends May En Fuego

Braves’ RF Ronald Acuna, Jr. came came into the final four games of May hitting .236, with just two home runs and 12 RBI on the season (42 games played). Then, from May 28 through May 31, in just four games, he went  six-for-thirteen, with five home runs, nine RBI, five runs scored,  seven walks and four stolen bases.

 

Primary Resources: Stathead.com; MLB.com

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs. For the full list click here

I tweet (on X) baseball @DavidBaseballRT. Follow me there for post notifications and links.

Follow Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary.

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Baseball Roundtable Trivia(L) Tidbit Tuesday: Call On the Bullpen Phone, Who Wants To Take It?

It’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye.  (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.

Twins’ rookie righthander Travis Adams recently had a pretty good series against the Boston Red Sox – picking up a win on May 22 (just his second MLB victory) and needing just one pitch to log his first MLB save on May 24.   In the latter game, he came on with two out in the bottom of the ninth, with the Twins up 6-5 and runners on first and third. He got Red Sox’ CF Ceddanne Raffaela to fly out to CF on his very first offering.

What intrigued The Roundtable was not the one-pitch aspect of the save, but the fact that it made Adams the eleventh Twins’ pitcher to record a save this season.  As usual with The Roundtable “one thing led to another” and I had to know what team held the record for the most pitchers logging saves in a season. Turns out the current record of 17 was set by the 2025 Diamondbacks.  In fact, the top four team figures also occurred in the 2020’s:  2025 Diamondbacks (17); 2024 Dodgers (14); 2021 Rays (14); and 2024 Rays (13).

Oops! Another Bright and Shiny Thing Caught The Roundtable’s Eye

The record for the most saves in a season by a pitcher who recorded ALL of his team’s saves is 47, by Kenley Jansen of the 2016 Dodgers. Jansen went 3-2, 1.83, with 47 saves in 53 opportunities. Eleven other  Dodgers’ pitchers were offered a total of 16 save opportunities without logging a save. The Dodger went 91-71 that season.

I went on to take a deeper look at that 2025 Diamondbacks’ record-breaking staff, Here are a few tidbits about that squad and the late-inning door.

  • Injuries played a role in the revolving saves door, as the Diamondbacks lost their top two relievers to injury early on: J. Puk in April and Justin Martinez in June. Veteran Shelby Miller, who stepped up to fill the gap (and led the team in saves with ten) was traded to the Brewers on July 31 – and even he caught the injury bug, going on the IL (as a Brewer) in early September.
  • Nine of the 17 pitchers on the list recorded their first MLB save in 2025: Jake Woodford; Andrew Saalfrank; Anthony DeSclafani; Kyle Backhus; Taylor Rashi; Ryan Nelson; Juan Morillo; Drey Jameson; Kyle Nelson.
  • For various reasons (injury, demotion to the minors or release), nine of the 17 pitchers have not pitched in the major leagues this season (as I key this post).
  • Despite having the most pitchers ever to record save, in 2025 the Diamondbacks logged the second fewest relief appearances in MLB (503).
  • Overall, the relief corps notched 42 saves – and had 29 blown saves.
  • Surprisingly, the Diamondbacks finished in the top half of MLB teams in total saves 42 (tied for twelfth among the thirty teams). They finished: 29th in wins by relievers (25); sixth in losses by relievers (35); second in blown saves (29); 14th in holds (89); and 27th in bullpen earned run average (4.82).
  • The Diamondbacks were one of 21 MLB teams to go to the bullpen in every 2025 game. Still, their 503 relief appearances were the second-fewest in MLB (the Cardinals had the fewest at 487).

Primary Resources: Stathead.com; MLB.com

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs. For the full list click here

I tweet (on X) baseball @DavidBaseballRT. Follow me there for post notifications and links.

Follow Baseball Roundtable’s Facebook Page here.  

Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary.

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Baseball Roundtable Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday … Those Long Ball Lineups

It’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye.  (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.

This week, we’re looking at power-hitting teams.  For example. Did you know the  2019 New York Yankees had a record 14 players reach double-digits homers? This week’s post looks at the teams with most players with 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 (or more) homers in the same season.

Side note:  There may be something to the theory that hitting can be contagious. You’ll find 33 names on this list and, of those, 17 made the list in theor career-high home run season.

2019 Yankees

Despite having 14 players with ten  or more home runs – and 306 total roundtrippers – the Yankees did not lead MLB, or even the AL, in team homers in 2019, as the Twins bashed a new (since tied) MLB record 307 home runs (more on that in a bit).  The 2019 Yankees did lead the majors in runs scored (943) and won the AL East title with a 103-59 record.  Gleyber Torres led the team in homers and his 38 long balls were sixth in the AL.  The Yankees defeated the Twins in the AL Division Series, before losing to the Astros in the American League Championship Series.

Side Note: Edwin Encarnacion hit 14 homers in 44 games for the Yankees after New York acquired him in a trade with the Mariners in mid-June. He also hit 21 long balls for the Mariners that season.  

  • The 2019 season saw the career-high in home runs for eight of the 14 Yankee double-digit home run hitters: Gleyber Torres; Gary Sanchez; Brett Gardner; DJ LeMahieu; Gio Urshela; Mike Tauchman (his only season with 10+ homers); Clint Frazier (his only season with 10+ homers); and Cameron Maybin.
  • It was Mike Ford’s rookie season and he popped 12 homers and drove in 25 runs in just 50 games. In six MLB seasons (2019-24 … Yankees, Giants, Mariners, Braves, Angels, Reds), Ford hit 37 home runs in 251 games.
  • Aaron Judge played in just 102 games, but stroked 27 homers. He, of course, has had (to date) a 62-homer season and three seasons of between 52 and 58 home runs.
  • Luke Voit followed his 21-homer 2019 season with a league-leading and career-high 22 homers in the 2020 (short) season.
  • Didi Gregorius hit his 16 2019 roundtrippers in just 82 games and Aaron Hicks hit 12 in 59 games.
  • Edwin Encarnacion had ten career seasons with 20 or more homers – putting up a career line of .260-424-1,261 over 16 seasons.

The 2019 AL MVP did not come from the first-place and homer-heavy Twins or Yankees. It was Mike Trout of the 72-90 (fourth-place, AL West) Angels. Trout went  .291-45-104  and led the AL in slugging percentage and on-base percentage. He finished second in home runs, ninth in RBI and sixth in runs scored.

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2019 Twins

The Twins set a new (since tied) MLB team record for home runs in a season with 307, while going 101-61 and finishing atop the AL Central. That season, Minnesota also set the records for the most 20-homer players on a season roster, as well as for the most 30-homer players. They lost to the Yankees in the Al Division Series.

  • It was one of 11 20+ homer seasons (and one of four seasons of at least 40 long balls) for Nelson Cruz, who retired with 464 career homers.
  • 2019 remains the career high in homers for Max Kepler (he has had three seasons of 20 or more roundtrippers);  Miguel Sano (who has had three 20+ homer seasons); Eddie Rosario (who has had four career 20+ homer seasons); and Mitch Garver (his only season with 15 or more homers).
  • C.J. Cron had four 20+ homer seasons; Jonathan Schoop had five 20+ homer seasons; Jorge Polanco has had three 20+ homer seasons.

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The 1973 Braves led MLB with 206 home runs and 799 runs scored, but still finished at 76-85 for fifth place in the  AL West (Don’t ask me why Atlanta was in the “West”).  Side note:  That season, the Braves’ pitching staff had the worst earned run average (4.25) in the National League.

The 1996 Rockies led the NL in homers (221) and runs scored (961), but like the 1973 Braves had the NL’s worst earned run average (5.59). They finished 83-79, third place in the four-team NL West Division.

In 1997, the Rockies repeated as NL leaders in home runs (239) and runs scored (923), but also again had the NL’s worse ERA (5.25) and  repeated their 83-79 third-place finish.

In 2023, the Braves set a new NL record (and tied the overall MLB record) for home runs in a season with 307. They also led MLB with 947 runs scored. They finished 104-58, atop the NL East, but lost to the Phillies in the NL Division Series.

1973 Braves

  • 1973 was Davey Johnson’s only season with forty or more homers. In fact, it was his only season with more than 18 home runs. In 13 MLB seasons, he hit 136 home runs (31.6 percent of them in 1973).
  • Darrell Evans had just two seasons of at least 40 homers: 1973 (41) and 1985 (40). Evans did have two additional seasons of thirty or more dingers. He finished his 21-season MLB career (1969-89 … Braves, Giants, Tigers) with a .248-414-1,354 stat line.
  • Henry Aaron was, of course, no stranger to 40-homer seasons (a high of 47 in 1971), he had eight of them on his way to 755 career long balls.

1996 & 1997 Rockies

  • Andres Galarraga was on both the 1996 and 1997 Rockies’ squads, leading the league with 47 home runs in 1996 and adding 41 in 1997. He led the league in RBI in both years, with 150 and 140, respectively. Galarraga played 19 MLB seasons, going .288-399-1,425 and hitting forty or more home runs three times (30+ twice more).
  • Vinny Castilla also hit 40 homers for the Rockies in both 1996 and 1997 (40 each time), as well as a career-high 46 in 1998. He played in 16 MLB seasons, going .276-320-1,105.
  • Ellis Burks was the Rockies’ third 40-homer player in 1996, as he logged his only 40-homer season. He played 18 MLB seasons, going .291-352-1,206. He topped 30 homers in four seasons (including 1996).
  • Replacing Burks as the Rockies’ third 40-homer batter in 1997, Larry Walker hit 49 long balls (to go with a .366 average). It was his only 40-homer season, although he did log three seasons of 35+ homers in his 17-season MLB career (.313-383-1,311).He was the 1997 NL MVP.

2023 Braves

  • The Braves had an entirely new cast of 40-homer players in 2023, led by Matt Olson, with a league-topping 54 (he also led the league in RBI with 139). It is, to date, the only 40+ homer season by Olson, who has three additional seasons of 30+ homers.  As I write this, Olson has 302 career homers on 10+ seasons.
  • Ronald Acuna, Jr. rapped 41 homers in 2023, as he became MLB’s first 40-70 player, with 73 stolen bases to complement his 41 dingers. It was Acuna’s second 40+ homer season and, as I key this in, he has 188 career homers and 212 career steals in 8+ seasons.
  • Marcell Ozuna popped 40 homers in 2023, his only 40-homer campaign to date. Again, as this is posted,  he has 301 career long balls in 13+ seasons, with three seasons (including 2023) of thirty or more dingers. The Braves came closest to adding a fourth 40-homer player (and securing a solo spot on this list), with Austin Riley hitting 37 dingers in 2023.

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1961 Yankees

This  of course was the exciting Maris/Mantle pursuit of Babe Ruth’s (then) record 60 home runs in a season, with Maris reaching 61 on the final day of the campaign.

The Yankees finished 1961 at 109-53, leading the American League. They went on to win the World Series four games-to one over the Reds. They led MLB with 240 team home runs and were second in runs scored (827 to the Tigers’ 841). Maris was the AL MVP.

From 1955 through 1962 (eight seasons), Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris won a combined five AL MVP Awards. Over those eight seasons, the Yankees made it to the World Series seven times and won it four.

  • Roger Maris’ 61 homers were, of course, his career high and 1961 was, in fact, one of only three seasons of 30 or more homers for the power hitter. In 12 MLB seasons, he went .260-271-850.
  • Mickey Mantle’s 54 homers were, like Maris’ 61, his career high. Mantle, however, had two seasons of 50+ homers, two more of 40 or more and another five of thirty or more.  He retired with a .298-536-1,509 line over 18 seasons.

Roger Maris hit his 61st home run of the 1961 season in the Yankees’ final regular-season game. It was the only run in a 1-0 win over the rival Red Sox in Yankee Stadium. Surprisingly, only 23,154 fans showed up for a chance to see the record breaker.

Final Tidbit: Five MLB teams have had a record 25 hitters hit at least one for them in the same season: 2001 Rockies; 2011 Diamondbacks; 2016 Mets; 2017 Giants; 2022 Reds; 2023 Angels.

Primary Resource: Stathead.com

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A Update on MLB Madduxes… Those 99-or-Fewer-Pitch Shutouts

Yesterday (May 12), the Twins’ 6′ 9″ righty Bailey Ober pitched the first shutout of his six-season MLB career (his third complete game) – and he did it in stellar fashion.  Ober twirled an uncommon gem, now commonly termed a  “Maddux” – designated as a single-pitcher shutout of at least nine innings in which the pitcher threw less than 100 pitches.  The victims were the Miami Marlins, who fell to the Twins 3-0 in Minnesota.  Ober used 89 pitches to set the Marlins down on two hits (no walks, seven strikeouts). It was the second Maddux of 2026, and the first also involved the Marlins.  On April 1, the Marlin’s Sandy Alcantara shut down the White Sox (10-0) on 93 pitches (three hits, no walks, seven strikeouts).

In his game, Bailey faced just 29 batters and 72 percent of his pitches were strikes.  He went to a three-ball count only twice and had five innings in which he threw less than ten pitches.  Long story short, Bailey’s outing spurred The Roundtable to update a past blog post on “Madduxes.”

As I looked into Madduxes, I was able to find 397 documented regular-season “Madduxes” – 331 since MLB officially began tracking pitch counts in 1988 and 66 pre-1988 listed by stathead.com.

Now, of course, the Baseball Roundtable’s goal is to find the unicorns among statistics. When it comes to Madduxes, no hitters are  not unicorns. Seventeen of the recorded Madduxes were no-nos. Neither are perfect games. Available pitch counts (Baseball-Almanac.com) show that at least ten of MLB’s 24 regular-season perfect games were completed in less than 100 pitches (and you can add in Don Larsen’s perfecto in the 1956 World Series, which came in at 97 pitches).  A bit of #InBaseballRoundtableOneThingAlwaysSeemsToLeadToAnother, the most pitches thrown in a Perfect Game is 125, by Matt Cain of the Giants in his perfect outing versus the Astros (a 10-0 win) on June 13, 2012. In that one, Cain fanned 14 Astros, giving him a tie (with Sandy Koufax) for the most strikeouts in a Perfect Game.  But I digress. Let’s get back to our regularly scheduled programming.

It became clear, I was looking in the wrong forest for my Maddux unicorn. So, I changed direction – and I found my first unicorn: Only one pitcher has ever thrown a Maddux while giving up ten or more hits.

 

Photo: Keith Allison on Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

 

 

 

On August 3, 2004, Twins’ righthander Carlos Silva shutout the Angels on 99 pitches – while giving up 11 hits and two walks (he struck out three) and having one batter reach safely on an error. The Twins, ironically, equaled the Angels’ 11 hits, but tallied ten runs. They did draw three walks to the Angels’ two and had two hit batsmen, with no one reaching on an an error. However, there were two big differences.  First, The Angels’ hits were all singles, while the Twins’ hit parade included four home runs and a double.  Second, the Twins turned six double plays behind Silva to zero twin killings turned by the Angels. In Silva’s Maddux, 19 of the thirty batters he faced saw two or fewer pitches (seven of those putting the first pitch of the at bat in play).

Silva went 14-8, 4.21 in 2004 and that Maddux was his only complete game.  For his career (2002-2010 … Phillies, Twins, Mariners, Cubs), Silva went 70-70, 4.68 in 316 games/180 starts, with six complete games and two shutouts.

I also found another interesting unicorn. Only one player has pitched what I’d call an Uber-Maddux. On September 6, 2003, the Blue Jays’ Roy Halladay pitched the only extra-inning Maddux. In a tough 1-0 win over the Tigers, Halladay pitched ten shutout innings (three hits, one walk, five strikeouts) on just 99 pitches.

Now, a few more Maddux’ tidbits.

  • Strikeouts, of course, run up the pitch count and diminish the opportunity for a Maddux. The most strikeouts in a Maddux is 13, achieved by the Tigers’ Tarik Skubal May 25, 2025 (in a 5-0, 94-pitch win over the Guardians). Seventy-two of Skubal’s 94 pitches were strikes (includes balls put in play) and his 13 strikeouts used 59 pitches, while the 16 batters he faced that didn’t fan required a total of 35 pitches.
  • Walks also run up the pitch count and the most walks issued in a Maddux is five, by the Dodger’s Vic Lombardi in a 5-0, 92-pitch win over the Cubs on July 11, 1947. Lombardi’s Maddux got off to a slow start. In the first two innings, he gave up three walks and a single and used 35 pitches. He struck out two in the game and was aided by four double plays.
  • The fewest pitches thrown in a Maddux is 58 by the Braves’ Red Barrett in a 2-0 win over the Reds on August 10, 1944. Barrett’s game was a two-hitter, with no strikeouts or walks. Although the pitch count for this game is not listed in stathead.com (so, if you’ve read this far, you can add one to my 397 Maddux count), it is generally recognized and can be found in his Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) bio by Sidney Davis; The SABR Article “August 10, 1944: Braves’ Red Barrett shuts out the Reds with record-low 58 pitches” (by Jack Zerby); the Baseball-Reference.com Bullpen section; the “Michelson Book of World Baseball Records”; and Baseball-Almanac.com. This outing is also recognized as the fewest pitches ever in any nine-inning complete game.
  • As you might expect, Greg Maddux holds the record for the most career Madduxes thrown (13). Next on the list is Zane Smith with seven. Maddux shares the record for the most Madduxes tossed in a season (three in 1998), with Smith (1991) and Sandy Koufax (1964).
  • 51 of the 397 Madduxes I was able to document came in right at 99 pitches – no margin for error. Mike Witt, Roy Halladay and Carl Erskine each had three of those. Greg Maddux went to the edge, using 99 pitches in a Maddux, just once in 13 qualifying outings.
  • The largest margin in a Maddux was 14-0, Mark Buehrle of the White Sox, over the Indians, on July 21, 2004.
  • The oldest pitcher to toss a Maddux was the Mariners’ Jamie Moyer, with A 93-pitch, 4-0 win over the Royals on June 2, 2006 (at age 43-years and 196 days).  The youngest was also a Mariner: Felix Hernandez (age 2o- years and 142 days, ), a 95-pitch, 2-0 win over the Angels.
  • The Braves’ Warren Spahn threw two Madduxes in June of 1963 (his age-42 season).
  • Jamie Moyer threw his  first (of of our) Madduxes on June 3, 1988 (at age 25) and his last Maddux came June 2, 2006 (at age 43).

I would add that Madduxes are becoming more of a rarity (which is an obvious trend given today’s pitching usage).  Going back to the first year of MLB officially tracking pitch counts as a statistic: The five seasons from 1988-92 saw 92 Madduxes, while the most recent five  complete MLB seasons (2021-25) saw 17. The last season in which we saw ten or more Madduxes was 2014 when there were 12.

Primary Resources: Stathead.com; Baseball-Almanac.com

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs. For the full list click here

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Baseball Roundtable Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday … Craig Anderson Has A Career Day at The Polo Grounds

It’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye.  (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.

This week we’re looking at a couple of tidbits inspired the first season of the New York Mets franchise.

On this date, May 12, in 1962, just shy of 20,000 Mets fans came to the Polo Grounds to take in a Mets’ doubleheader. Just how long ago was 1962?  The Mets were hosting the “Milwaukee” Braves in a single-admission doubleheader.  At the time, the Mets were 5-17 (ninth place, 13 games out) and the Braves were 13-14 (seventh place, 7 1/2 games out).  Braves’ first-game starter Warren Spahn had thrown two complete games (remember those) in his first six starts of the season and would end the campaign with 22 complete games in 34 starts at age 41 (and no one uttered the words “pitch count.”)  The promise of an exciting day of baseball might have seem a bit off in the distance, but things would change.

In Game One, the Braves (behind the pitching of Warren Spahn) held a 2-1 lead after seven innings. In the top of the eighth, the Mets made a Craig-for-Craig switch – bringing  in righty Craig Anderson in relief of starting righthander Roger Craig (who, incidentally would finish the 1962 season as 10-24, 4.51).

But I digress. Anderson came in an tossed a scoreless eighth and ninth, keeping the Milwaukee margin at 2-1. In the bottom of the ninth, Mets’ 1B Gil Hodges greeted Spahn with an inning-opening single.  Spahn then fanned PH  Cliff Cook and got PH Gus Bell on a pop out. Next, C Hobie Landrith smacked a two-run homer off Spahn, giving the Mets a walk-off win and Anderson a victory.

Game Two had a bit more action, but a similar outcome. This one was knotted at seven runs apiece after eight frames and each team has used four pitchers to get there. Milwaukee CF Hank Aaron was two-for-two, with a home run, a double. A walk, a sacrifice fly and a stolen base; while Mets’  SS Elio Chacon was three-for-three, with a triple, two runs scored and three RBI. In the top of the ninth, the Mets brought in  Vinegar Bend Mizell to pitch and he opened the inning by walking Brave’s SS Roy McMillan. A that point, Casey Stengel brought in Anderson, who dispatched C Del Crandall on a sacrifice bunt, before wild-pinching McMillan to third.  Anderson then  toughened up and retired LF Tommie Aaron on a groundout (pitcher-to-first) and RF Mack Jones on a groundout (first-to-pitcher) to keep the game knotted at seven.  Long story short, the second batter for the Mets in the ninth (1B Gil Hodges, remember his Game One heroics). rapped a walk-off home run for a doubleheader sweep.  Another, “How long ago was that?” moment: The Mets would play 30 doubleheaders that season (they only swept three).

The Mets May 12 1962 doubleheader sweep of the Braves was the first time in MLB that a doubleheader sweep was completed with both games ending with a walk-off home run.

So, the Mets were now 7-17 and three of the wins belonged to Anderson. Things didn’t go as well for Anderson moving forward. He pitched in 40 more games that season and, over that span, went 0-16, 5.81 (he did have four saves)  He finished 1962 (when the Mets went 40-120) with a 3-17, 4.35 line. He pitched in two more MLB seasons, going 0-3, 6.85 and, while I am still digging into this, Anderson is the only pitcher I have been able to find who won both ends of a doubleheader and,  from that point on, never won another MLB game. His final stat line was 7-23, 5.10 and his best season was his rookie campaign (1961 Cardinals) when he went 4-3, 3.26 in 25 appearances.

Now, here’s another 1962 Mets ’diversion that caught my attention.

Double Vision – Or, “That’s Your Uncle(s) Bob.”

On August 15, 1962, the Phillies topped the Mets 9-3 in the first game of a doubleheader at the Polo Grounds.  No big surprise there, as the Mets’ record going into the game was 30-88. What was more surprising was that Phillies’ outfielder Don Demeter hit his 19th and 20th home runs of the season in the game – off a right-handed and a left-handed “Bob Miller.” Oh yes, and he did it while listed in the lineup  two different defensive positions.

In the third inning, with the Phillies’ up 2-0, Demeter (who had started the game in left field and in the five-spot in the order) smacked a solo shot off starter (right-hander) Robert Lane “Bob” Miller. Then in the ninth inning, Demeter – who had moved to center field in the seventh – hit a three-run homer (extending the Phillies’ lead to 9-2) off southpaw reliever Robert Gerald “Bob” Miller. Two homers, in one game, off two Bob Millers, a right-hander and a port-sider.

Demeter, notably, was on the way to his best-ever major-league season. In 1962 (his sixth of eleven MLB seasons), he achieved his career highs for average (.307), home runs (29), RBI (107), runs scored (85), hits (169) and doubles (24).  He played in a total of 11 MLB seasons (1956, 1958-67 … Dodgers, Phillies, Tigers, Red Sox, Indians), going .265-163-563.

The two Millers?  Starter Bob Miller went 1-12, 4.89 in 1962 (69-81, 3.37 with 52 saves in 17 MLB seasons – 1957, 1959-74 … Cardinals, Mets, Dodgers, Twins, Indians, White Sox, Cubs, Padres, Pirates, Tigers). Reliever Bob Miller went 2-2, 10.17 in 1962, the last of his five MLB seasons (6-8, 4.72).  He played in the majors in 1953-56 and 1962.

Next week, another 1962 Mets-inspired, Tidbit a comparison of the only two teams to lose 120 (or more) games in a season in the Modern ERA (since 1900): The 1962 Mets and the 2024 White Sox.

Primary Resource: Stathead.com

 

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

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P 1166

 

Baseball Roundtable Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday … A Travelin’ Man Who Was Hard to Beat

It’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye.  (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistic.

On April 26, Blue Jays’ right-handed reliever Brayson Fisher won his ninth MLB game (in his 67th career appearance).  It gave Brayson (temporarily) an MLB record that it he is very unlikely to keep (unless he chooses early retirement) … the most wins by a pitcher to go his entire MLB career with zero losses. As of this writing, the 25-year-old Fisher is in his second MLB season (2025-26, Blue Jays) and has a 9-0, 2.77 record (69 appearances, one start, 68 1/3 innings, 26 walks, 80 strikeouts.)

Side Note: Brayson is three wins short of the most consecutive wins (without a loss) to start an MLB career – shared by  George “Hooks” Wiltse, Giants, May 20-September 15, 1904 and Clarence “Butch” Metzger,  Giants, September 21, 1974 – August 1, 1976.  Wiltse eventually went 139-90, 2.47 over 12 MLB seasons; Metzger went 18-9, 3.74, with 23 saves over five MLB seasons.  

For those of you who like to know such things (probably just a few, but I am one of them) as soon as Fisher picks up an MLB loss, the record for wins in a zero-loss career will fall back to southpaw reliever Clay Rapada, who pitched in seven MLB seasons (2007-13 … Cubs, Tigers, Rangers, Orioles, Yankees, Indians) and went 8-0, 4.06 in 152 appearances (all in relief), with 93 innings of work (51 walks, 82 strikeouts). Rapada is the subject of this week’s Tuesday Trivia(l)  Tidbit.

A Travelin’ Man … A Tribute to Perseverance … For The Love Of The Game

In fifteen professional seasons as a player, Rapada was:

  • signed by eight  MLB franchises
  • played in the majors for six of them;
  • played in the minors for 12 teams;
  • played a season in the Arizona Fall League; and
  • played a season in the Venezuelan Winter League

Rapada was originally signed by the Cubs in 2002  (as an undrafted free agent) out of Virginia State University. From 2002-2007, he worked his way up from low-A to Triple-A in the Cubs system – going a combined 21-17 (41 saves), 2.99, with 310 strikeouts and 125 walks in 315 2/3 innings. During that time,  Rapada suited up for Cubs’ affiliates: the Boise Hawks; Lansing Lug Nuts; Daytona Cubs; Iowa Cubs; and West Tennessee Diamond Jaxx (as well as for the Mesa Solar Sox in the 2006 Arizona Fall League, where he went 1-1, 3.07 in 16 relief appearances) . He was selected an All Star in both the Midwest League (Iowa Cubs) and Southern League (West Tennessee Diamond Jaxx).

Rapada’s time in the Cubs’ system included one MLB appearance- June 14, 2007 versus the Mariners – when he faced and retired just one batter (Raul Ibanez) on a lineout to RF.

The Old Switcheroo

In 2004, the Cubs suggested Clay Rapada switch to a sidearm delivery (which he had used occasionally in high school and college) and the switch played a role in charting his path to the big leagues.

In August of 2007, Rapada was traded to the Tigers (and added the Triple-A Toledo Mud Hens  to his resume). He was called up and got in his first game as a Tiger on September 9, again facing the Mariners’ Ibanez (who tagged him for a three-run homer) – coincidentally again facing just the one batter. (So, at this point in his MLB career, he had pitched in two games, faced just two batters – both times Raul Ibanez.)  Rapada finished the 2007 season with an MLB line of 0-0, 10.13 in five appearances.

In 2008, Rapada split time between Mud Hens and the Tigers. For Detroit, he went 3-0, 4.22 in 25 games (21 1/3 innings, 15 strikeouts and 14 walks). He got his first MLB win on April 15, pitching 2/3 of an inning of scoreless relief versus the Twins. Rapada came in in the top of the eighth with one out, no one on base and the Tigers losing 4-3.  He quickly retired the Twins’ number-three and number -four hitters (C Joe Mauer, groundout and 1B Justin Morneau, strikeout) to end the inning. The Tigers took the lead in the bottom of the inning and closer Todd Jones saved the win for Rapada, who would end the season 3-0, 4.22 in 25 appearances (only 21 1/3 innings).

In 2009, Rapada spent most of his season at Toledo, getting in just three games for the Tigers. Side note: It was one game (1 1/3 innings) in April; one game (one inning) in May) and one game (one inning) in October – for an 0-0, 5.40 record.   He was 4-2, 2.76, with five saves for Toledo.

In December of 2009, Rapada was traded to the Rangers.  In 2010,he  pitched for the Rangers-affiliated, Triple-A Oklahoma City RedHawks (1-2, 1.82, with two saves in 50 appearances), until an early September call up, during which he went 0-0, 4.00 in 13 games (nine innings), with five strikeouts and seven walks for the Rangers.

In 2011, Rapada was back on the move, released by the Rangers and signed by the Orioles in January. He was up and down (major/minors) for the Orioles and finished with a  2-0, with a 2-0, 6.06 record in 32 MLB appearances. At this point, his MLB record was 5-0, 5.13 in 78 appearances (52 2/3 innings, 44 strikeouts and 32 walks), but he was about to move forward into the best MLB season of his career.  In fact, the only season in which he spent the entire campaign in the major leagues.

In in February of 2012, Rapada was released by the Orioles and signed by the Yankees, made the Opening Day roster and went on to a 3-0. 2.82 season (with an MLB career-high 70 MLB appearances, career-high 38 1/3 innings pitched and career-high 38 strikeouts, while walking just 17). Still, he found himself in the Yankees’ minor-league system in 2013, was released mid-season and signed with the Indians’ franchise in June. He got a September 2013 callup to Cleveland, where he went 0-0, 0.00 in four games (just two innings)

Although Rapada would pitch in the Angels, Mariners, Orioles and Giants minor-league systems between 2014 and 2018, he did not get another taste of the big leagues – ending with  the previously noted  career record of 8-0, 4.06. In 13 minor-league seasons, Rapada went 34-27, 2.96, with 60 saves in 497 appearances, with 592 2/3 innings pitched, 567 strikeouts and 223 walks. After retiring as a player, he went on to coach in the Giant’s system.

Bottom line, Rapada is still the only MLB pitcher to complete his career with at least eight wins  and not a single loss on his stat sheet.

A Couple of Trivia(l) Diversions

The Other Side of the Coin – Career Losses for a Player with Zero Career Wins

The record for the most losses in a career by a pitcher without a single win is 16, and it belongs to Terry Felton. Unlike Clay Rapada (above), Felton pitched for just one MLB team in his  MLB career.  From 1979-1982, Felton went 0-16, 5.53 in 55 games (10 starts) for the Twins, pitching 138 1/3 innings, fanning 108 and walking 87. Felton also holds a share of the record the most losses in a season without a single win (13). In 1982, his final MLB season, Felton was 0-13, 4.99 in 48 games (six starts.) Hulon “Lefty” Stamps (1927 Memphis Red Sox, Negro National League) finished 0-13- 6.24 in 20 games/10 starts). In four Negro League seasons, Stamps compiled a 2-23, 5.87 record.

Back to Victory Lane – Most Wins Without a Loss in a Seasons

In 1938, Ray Brown of the Homestead Grays of the Negro National League II went 14-0, 1.88 in 20 games, 11 starts. (The Grays played a 54-game season.) Brown’s MLB career record was 119-46, 3.12 in 14 seasons (1931-33, 1935-45). He led his league in wins six times.

Just behind Brown is Tom Zachary of the 1929 Yankees (12-0, 2.48 in 26 games, 11 starts).   Zachary’s MLB career record (19 seasons, 1918-36) was 186-191, 3.73 in 533 games, 408 starts.

 

Primary Resources: Stathead.com; Baseball-Almanac.com; RedHawks Sidearm Relievers  Excelling, April 13, 2010, The Oklahoman, by David Stanley Ford.

 

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs. For the full list click here

I tweet (on X) baseball @DavidBaseballRT. Follow me for new blog post notifications.

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Member: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR); Negro Leagues Baseball Museum; The Baseball Reliquary.

P 1165

 

Baseball Roundtable March/April Wrap Up … Homers, Strikeouts and Streaks, Oh My!

It’s May 1, and that means it’s time for Baseball Roundtable’s March/April Wrap up – a look at the stats and stories that caught The Roundtable’s attention over the past month (in this case a bit more than a month), as well as The Roundtable’s Players and Pitchers of the Month, Trot Index and more.  As you might expect, given the state of the game, the highlights include a lot of home runs and a heavy dose of strikeouts.  Just a few of this month’s highlights that you will find in this post:

  • a player (Ildemaro Vargas) who collected a hit in every one of the 23 March/April games he played;
  • A pitching staff (Brewers) who fanned a record 20 opposing hitters on Opening Day;
  • 2026’s first Immaculate Inning (Mike Soroka);
  • One player (Jo Adell) making three homer-robbing catches in a single game, earning his glove a trip to Cooperstown;
  • Kenley Jansen climbing to number-three on the all-time saves list;
  • A player (JJ Wetherholt) being hit by a pitch in five straight games;
  • A manager (Alex Cora) fired after a 17-1 win;;
  • A hot line drive hit, literally, into a pitcher’s (Logan Gilbert) shirt; and
  • Much more.

Go the highlights and statistics sections section for all the stories.

Baseball Roundtable March/April Players and Pitchers  of the Month

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Player of the Month … Drake Baldwin, C, Braves

Drake Baldwin, the Braves’ 25-year-old C/DH, in just his second MLB season, has opened some eyes in Atlanta and around MLB. Baldwin put up a .308-7-25 line in March/April and also tied for the NL lead in runs scored (30) and for the lead in base hits (40). He was, in fact, one of only three MLB players with 25 or more run scored and 25 or more RBI for March/April.  A “25-25” start to the season is quite an accomplishment. In fact, if you lower the bar to 20+ runs and 20+ RBI, you still find only 16 2026 qualifiers.

Baldwin, in fact, scored in 24 of 20 March/April games and had two four-RBI contests. He collected hits in 25 March/April games and had multiple in 13. Baldwin, in fact, never went two consecutive games without a hit.

Baldwin was a third-round pick in the 2022 MLB Draft, out of Missouri State University, where he hit .317-24-105 in three seasons (120 games). In three minor-league seasons, he went .272-32-158 in 257 games and, in 2025, he hit .274-19-80 in 124 games for the Braves.

Honorable Mentions: Reds’ 22-year-old 1B Sal Stewart (like Baldwin in his MLB second season) got out the blocks fast, with a .281-9-29, line (with 20 runs scored).  His 29 RBI led MLB. Reds’ SS Elly De La Cruz cruised in at .282-10-24, with 26 runs and the added bonus of eight steals. Miami C Liam Hicks put up a .315-7-28 line  (second only to Stewart in RBI) and Braves’ veteran 1B Matt Olson went .296-9-28, with 27 runs scored. Finally, there is Diamondbacks’ 1B Ildemaro Vargas, who went .378-6-20 in 23 games (his .378 average leading all players with at least 75 at bats.) Vargas, notably, had at least one hit in every March/April game he played. More on Vargas in the Surprise Player of the Month section.

 

Pitcher of the Month … Shohei Ohtani, RHP, Dodgers

This was a tough one.  You had the likes of the Braves’ Chris Sale and Giant’s Landen Roupp, each with an NL-topping five March/April wins, the Brewers’ Jacob Misiorowski with a NL-leading 51 strikeouts in just 32  2/3 innings; the Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani with an MLB-lowest (among pitchers with at least 25 March/April innings) 0.60 earned run average; and the Padres’ Mason Miller with an MLB-topping  ten saves (in ten opportunities) and 29 punchouts in 15 1/3 innings.

Wow! Where to go with this one.?  I went with Ohtani.

Consider, while Ohtani was only 2-1, you can’t ignore his MLB-best (among pitchers with at least 25 innings pitched) 0.60 earned run average. The guy gave up just two runs in five starts (30 innings) and he fanned 34 batters (nine walks). His 0.87 WHIP was fourth in the NL (among pitchers with at least 25 innings) and his .160 average against third.  As far as the lack of wins, you can’t blame Ohtani. In  his five starts, the Dodgers plated just six runs while he was in the game. (I gave him extra credit for pitching under pressure.)

The fact is, you can make a strong case for any of the Honorable Mentions as well.

Honorable Mentions: Already mentioned these near misses in the first paragraph: the Padres’ Mason Miller, who could easily have been part of a three-way tie (1-0, 1.17 with ten saves in ten opportunities and 29 strikeouts versus just three walks, in 15 1/3 innings); Giants’ Landen Roupp (5-1, 2.55 in six starts); Dodgers’ Jason Wrobleski, a surprise 4-0, 1.50 in five appearances/four starts;  and Braves’ veteran Chris Sale, 5-1, 2.31 in six starts, who gave up more than one run in only one of his six outings and who fanned 38 batters and walked just nine (35 innings).

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Pitcher of the Month – Jose Soriano, RHP, Angels

Photo: Sewageboy, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

This was a bit easier the the NL considerations. Earned Run Average is that bright and  shiny thing that always gets The Roundtable’s attention.  Couple it with victories and you have a Pitcher of the Month formula. Angels’ righty Jose Soriano’s March/April performance fit that twin bill.  Soriano put up a 5-1  in seven March/April starts – tying for the most wins in MLB.   And, his stingy  0.84 ERA was lowest among AL pitchers with at least 25 innings pitched (second only to Shohei Ohtani in MLB.).  In 42 2/3 innings (fifth-most in the AL), he gave up just 24 hits and 16 walks, while fanning 49 batters (tied for second-best in the AL).  Among pitchers with at least 25 innings pitched, His WHIP of 0.94 was fifth-best in the AL and he held batters to a .164 average (second-lowest among AL pitchers with at least 25 innings pitched). The 27-year-old’s emergence is a bit of a surprise.  In three previous MLB seasons (91 appearances/51 starts), he had been 17-21, 3.89.

In his seven starts this season, Soriano has given up zero earned runs in five.  His best game came on April 6 versus the tough Atlanta Braves, as Soriano went eight innings, giving up three hits and no runs, while fanning ten and walking none.  (Extra credit here, in that he went 5-1 for a Angels’ squad that went 12-20.)

Soriano is also a “good story,”  given the  challenges he has faced in his pro career. He was signed as an International Free Agent, out of the Dominican Republic, in March of 2016.  After showing some promise, but not rising above A-Ball, he underwent Tommy John Surgery in February of 2020 and was later taken (from the Angels) by the Pirates in the 2020 Rule Five Draft. In the Pirates’ system, he pitched just two games (High-A) before suffering another injury and undergoing his second Tommy John Surgery (June of 2021). In November of 2021, he was returned to the Angels and, after a rehab period, resumed his career at Single-A. Shortening up a long story,  Soriano showed swing-and-miss stuff and was promoted to the Angels  – as a reliever – in June of 2023 (3.64 ERA and 56K in 42 innings in 38 appearances for the Halos).  He was back in a starting role with the Angels in 2024 and was 6-7, 3.42 (22 games/20 starts/97K in 113 innings) before being put on the 60-day IL in early September.  He had a less eventful 2025, going 10-11, 4.26 in 31 starts (152K in 158 innings).  And that brings us to his remarkable 2026 early-season performance

Honorable Mentions:  Gotta like Yankees‘ 25-year-old righty Cam Schlittler, 4-1, 1.51 (ERA second only to Soriano among AL pitchers with 25 innings).  In seven  starts, he fanned 49 and walked just six in 41 2/3 innings. His  0.74 WHIP is the lowest among AL pitchers with at least 25 March/April innings and he held hitters to a .168 average. A shoutout also goes to Peter Messick of the Guardians, 3-0, 1.73 with 38K in 36 1/3 innings; the Guardians’ Gavin Williams (5-1, 2.70 in seven starts, with a league-leading 53 strikeouts; and the Yankees’ Max Fried, 4-1, 2.09 in seven starts, with a league-topping 47 1/3 innings pitched (0.80 WHIP, .161 average against).

Player of the Month… Yordan Alvarez, DH, Astros

Flickr user thatlostdog–, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

It’s rare that the Roundtable picks a primary DH as Player of the Month, but the Astros’ Yordan Alvarez earned it with a truly a dominant March/April at the plate. Alvarez had the second-highest batting average among MLB players with at least 25 March/April at bats at .356.  He led MLB in hits (42); was tied for first  in home runs (12); was fourth in RBI (27); and scored 25 runs. Alvarez led all MLB players with at least 75 at bats in slugging percentage (.737) and was first in on-base percentage (.462). Alvarez drew 21 walks (versus just 14 strikeouts. His month included  a 13-game hitting streak (April 14-28), during which he hit .389-5-12. Overall,  he collected hits in 25 of 31 games; and multiple hits in 14.

Honorable Mentions: Diamondbacks’ Ildemaro Vargas, a lot more on Vargas in the Surprise Player of the Month section.  Suffice here to just to say he posted  .378-6-20 line, with a 23-game hitting streak. Vargas was edged out by Alvarez due the latter’s HR, RBI and runs scored advantage. Also recognized zed are Yankee 1B Ben Rice, who went .327-10-23, with 26 runs scored; and the Angels’ Mike Trout, who hit just .248, but drew 32 walks (.431 OBP), smacked  ten homers, drove in 21 runs and scored an 29.

 

Surprise Player of the Month … Ildemaro Vargas, 2B/3B/SS, Diamondbacks

This one should be subtitled “For The Love Of The Game.

Ildemaro Vargas is a true journeyman, utility player, in his first nine MLB seasons 2017-25 … Diamondback, Nationals, Cubs, Twins , Pirates), he appeared in 174 games at 3B, 145 at 2B, 48 at SS, 29 in LF, five on the mound and two in RF; plus 104 games as a pinch-hitter, 14 as a pinch-runner and seven as a DH. In 2021 alone, he took the field for the Cubs, Pirates and Diamondbacks.

In those first nine MLB seasons, he appeared in an average of 51 MLB games per season, never reaching 100 games.  (In seven of those nine, he also spent time in the minors). Over those nine seasons, Vargas hit .249-20-145 over 458 games.  Side Note:  Vargas also has a dozen seasons in the Venezuelan Winter League on his baseball resume.

This season, Vargas is off to a .378-6-20 start (with his average leading all MLB qualifiers).

Further, he has yet to go a game without a hit.  Let me key that again, he has played 23 games in March/April and  has at least one hit in each of them.  He also collected hits in his last three games of 2025, giving him an active 26-game hitting streak. And, true to his history, this season, he has appeared at 1B, 2B, 3B,SS,  LF and DH. DH

This is a true surprise and a great feel-good story. (Oh, for those who like to know such things, the longest season-opening hitting streak belongs to the Tigers Ron LeFlore at 30 (1976).

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THE TROT INDEX … A REGULAR BASEBALL ROUNDTABLE FEATURE

Through April 30,  35.8% of the MLB season’s 35,655 plate appearances ended in a trot (back to the dugout, around the bases, to first base). We’re talking about strikeouts, home runs, walks, hit by pitch and catcher’s interference – all outcomes that are, basically, devoid of action on the base paths or in the field. Here’s the breakout: strikeouts (22.2%); walks (9.6%); HR (2.8%); HBP (1.1%); catcher’s interference (less than 1%). 

The 35.8% is up slightly from  the 35.0% through April in 2025, when the figure were:  strikeouts (22.1%); walks (9.0%); home runs (2.8%); HBP (1.0%); catcher’s interference (less than 1%). I’ve  also looked into full-year Trot Index figures for the years I have been a fan: 30.3% in 2010; 29.9% in 2000; 31.7% in 1990; 23.1% in 1980; 27.0% in 1970; 25.1% in 1960; and 22.8% in 1950.

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If the season ended May 30, your playoff teams would have been:

          AL:  Yankees, Athletics, Guardians. WC: Rays, Mariners, Tigers.

          NL: Braves, Dodgers, Reds.  WC: Padres, Cubs, Cardinals.

A few observations:

  • As of close of play April 30, the AL Central, without a single team over .500, would have two teams in the post-season; the same number as the NL Central, which did not have a single team under .500.
  • The Dodgers, with MLB’s highest payroll (per Sports Illustrated) are 20-11, in first place in the NL West.  The Mets, with MLB’s second-highest payroll,  are 10-21 (MLB’s worst  through April).
  • Four teams had at least 20 wins through April 30.The Yankees, Braves, Dodgers and Reds.  The first three are in the top nine in terms of salaries (third, eighth and first, respectively), the Reds are number-19.
  • The Reds lead the NL Central with a 20-11 record, despite a negative-three run differential, having been outscored 136-133 in March/April.  Three of the seven division leaders (one tie) have a negative run differentials:  Guardians (-8); Athletics (-5); Reds (-3).
  • The largest positive run differential is a plus-66, by both the Dodges and Braves, The largest negative run differential belongs to Phillies at minus-45.
  • The Nationals are not keeping the home crowds happy. There are 12-7 on the road, but 3-10 at home.
  • The Astros lead the AL in runs scored, but are 12-20 on the season.

Seeing Red, Rooting Red

Of special interest to me are the Reds, with a negative-three run differential, but a 20-11 record.  The three other teams with 20 or more wius have run differentials of +66 (Dodgers and Braves) and +47 (Yankees).  How are the Reds doing it – and can it be sustained?  First thing I noticed is that they have MLB’s best record in one-run games – a clean 7-0, as well as in extra-innings (3-0). They also have played just three games against teams over .500, 18 games against AL teams and only three games within their own division.  It looks like a challenge, but they have some interesting pieces and I’ll be rooting for them.

The offense, so far, has really gone through SS Elly De La Cruz (.282-10-24, with eight steals) and C Sal Stewart (.281-9-29).  Those two have driven in 39 percent of the Reds’ runs, scored 38 percent and knocked 45 percent of the team’s home runs.  They can expect some help from  DH Nathan Lowe (thus far .288-5-12) and LF Spencer Steer (.237-5-10), but they will need more balance on offense. DH/3B Eugenio Suarez – sidelined with an oblique issue –  has 328 homers on his resume (13 seasons) and, if he returns and heats up,  it could add depth to the lineup.

The Reds are missing sidelined starters  Hunter Greene (elbow surgery) and Nick Lodolo (blister)To this point, Chase Burns (3-1, 2.65) in six starts and Rhett Lowder (3-1, 3.18  in six starts) are leading the pitching, but the remainder of the rotation – Andrew Abbott, Brady Singer and Brandon Williamson have ERAs of 5.97, 4.97 and 6.11 as we enter May. (Williamson is now also on the IL).  Lodolo (9-8, 3.33 a year ago) is expected back soon and should strengthen the rotation.   The bullpen has been a strength  – particularly Graham Ashcraft (1.20 ERA in 15 games), Connor Phillips (2.04 in 16 games) and Brock Burke (0.63 in 15 games) and has played a major role in the Reds’ ability to win close games.  Closer Emilio Pagan has had some early struggles, perhaps tied to hamstring issue. If he ends up on the IL, Reds fans will likely see some new arms from Triple-A.

Overall, a lot will have to go right and some players will have to get healthy for the Reds to remain “in the hunt.”  Probably not in the cards over the long seasons, but hey have shown some grit to this point and they should be exciting/interesting to watch (think Elly De La Cruz).

——-Team Statistical Leaders March/April 2026 ———-

RUNS SCORED

National League – Braves (177); Nationals (175); Cubs (169)

American League – Astros (168); Twins (154); Yankees (153)

The fewest runs in March/April were scored by the Giants (104). In the American League, it was the Rangers (120).    

AVERAGE

National League – Dodgers (.273); Braves (.271); Cubs (.261)

American League – Astros (.265); Rays (.250); Tigers (.250)

The lowest team average for March/April belonged to the Reds at .220 – the White Sox were at the bottom of the NL at .225.

HOME RUNS

National League – Dodgers (45); Braves (43); Cubs (42); Reds (42)

American League – Yankees (48); Angels (42); Astros (40)

The fewest home runs in March/April were hit by the Giants (19). In the American League, it was the Red Sox, at 21. 

TOTAL BASES

National League – Braves (495); Dodgers (474) ; Cubs (457)

American League – Astros (482); Tigers (438); Yankees (430)

The Dodgers led MLB in March/April Slugging Percentage at .452. The Astros led the AL (.438)

DOUBLES

National League – Braves (61); Rockies (61); Diamondbacks (55)

American League – Astros (66); Tigers (62); Guardians (54)

TRIPLES

National League – D-backs (10); Marlins (8); Phillies (7)

American League – White Sox (6); Rays (5); Royals (5); Tigers (5)

 STOLEN BASES

National League – Brewers (36); Marlins (36); Nationals (32)

American League – Rays (34); Yankees (32); Rays (29); Twins (26)

The Giants stole the fewest sacks in March/April  at eight – in 12 attempts.  The Tigers stole the fewest bags in the AL – nine in 13 attempts.  

WALKS DRAWN

National League – Brewers (142); Cubs (141); Reds (128)

American League – Yankees (138); Angels (135); Twins (134)

The Cubs led MLB in March/April on-base percentage at .353. The Astros led the AL at .346. The Mets had MLB’s lowest March/April  OBP at .289.  The Red Sox anchored the AL at .309. 

BATTER’S STRIKEOUTS

National League – Pirates (306); Rockies (304); Reds (286)

American League – Angels (314); White Sox (290); Mariners (288)

Blue Jays’ batters fanned the fewest times in March/April (210). The D-backs fanned the fewest times in the NL at 240.

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EARNED RUN AVERAGE

National League – Braves (3.12); Dodgers (3.19); Brewers (3.74)

American League – Yankees (3.11); Rangers (3.47); Mariners (3.67)

The Astros had the highest March/April ERA at 6.08.  The Nationals had the highest ERA in the NL at 5.08.

STRIKEOUTS

National League – Pirates (301); Phillies (291); Mets (289)

American League – Guardians (297); Blue Jays (294);  Astros (293);

The Blue Jays averaged an MLB-best 9.60 strikeouts per nine innings in March/April. The Phillies averaged an NL-best 9.51.  Eight teams averaged nine whiffs per nine or better.

FEWEST WALKS SURRENDERED

National League –   Cubs (94); Dodgers (97); Phillies (98)

American League – Mariners (80); Yankees (85); Rangers (96)

The Mariners walked an MLB-lowest 2.53 batters per nine innings in March/April.  The Astros walked an MLB-worst 5.66 batters per nine frames.

SAVES

National League – Padres (12); Braves (11); Cardinals (11)

American League – Rays (12); Athletics (11); Orioles (10); White Sox (10)

The Nationals  blew the most saves in March/April  – ten (in 17 opportunities).  The Astros had just one blown save in 7 opportunities.  

Walks + Hits/Innings Pitched (WHIP)

National League – Dodgers (1.12); Braves (1.16); Cubs (1.19)

American League:  Yankees (1.14); Rangers (1.21); Guardians (1.23)

Bonus Stats:

  • The Nationals gave up an MLB-high 52 home runs in March/April. The Padres gave up an MLB-low 35 home runs.
  • Dodgers’ pitchers held opponents to an MLB-low .210 average in March/April. The Phillies’ staff was touched for an MLB-high .280 average.
  • The Mariners’ strikeouts-to-walks ratio for March/April topped MLB at 3.23. The Astros had MLB’s worst ratio at 1.67.

—–2026 MARCH/APRIL HIGHLIGHTS—–

A “Home “Opener

The 2026 MLB season opened at 5:05 p.m., Wednesday,  March 26 in front of approximately 41,000 fans in San Francisco’s Oracle Park. March still seems a tad early, but there were some positives for me.  I was happy to see the National Pastime open with a game that took place in a true “home” ballpark.  As regular readers know, The Roundtable has never been fond of those “overseas” season openers, held in sports facilities where neither team is really the “home” squad and usually several days before the rest of MLB starts playing games that count. Score one for MLB (with me) on this one.

A few highlights and lowlights. The Yankees rocked the hometown Giants 7-0 (a highlight or lowlight depending on your allegiance). The first strikeout of the season can be credited to the first batter of the season. Giants’ starter Logan Webb fanned Yankee leadoff hitter CF Trent Grisham to open the game.  (Webb also fanned Yankee number-two hitter RF Aaron Judge, which proved to be more of a sign for what Judge would do than what Webb would accomplish.  (After his 1-2-3, two-strikeout first inning of the season, Giants’ ace Webb went on to last just five innings and gave up nine hits and seven runs – six earned – although he did fan seven.) Yankee slugger Judge struck out four times before putting the ball in play for a ninth-inning 5-3 groundout.)

Aaron Judge was the only member of the Yankee lineup to go hitless on Day One.

The first hit of 2026 went to Giants’ DH Rafael Devers (first-inning single); the first run scored to Yankees’  DH Giancarlo Stanton in the second inning (when the Bronx Bombers plated five runs versus Webb); the first RBI to Yankees’ SS  Jose Caballero, who plated Stanton with a second-inning single. There were no home runs in the game. In fact, 12 of the games’ combined 13 hits were singles (Grisham had a second-inning, two-run triple.) Webb of course, took the first loss of the season. Max Fried, who went 6 1/3 scoreless frames got the first win, and there was no save.

Let’s Get This Party Started … Two-for Two

In the season’s first week, we saw a pair players  go deep twice in their first-ever MLB regular-season game.

On March 26, Guardians 24-year-old rookie RF Chase DeLauter, batting second in his first regular-season MLB appearance (focus on the term “regular-season,”  it  will come into play), gave the Guardians a quick lead – homering (solo shot off the Mariners’ Logan Gilbert) in the  first inning. In the process, he joined the more than 140 players who have  gone deep in their  first MLB regular-season at bat. Then, in the ninth inning, DeLauter book-ended the  game and moved into more rarified air, adding a second solo homer (off Cooper Criswell) to join just six players to homer twice in their debut regular-season game.  Overall, DeLauter was three-for-five, with three runs scored and two RBI on the 6-4 Cleveland road win.

Why the regular-season modifier?  DeLauter actually made his MLB debut in last season’s AL Wild Card Series, going one-for-six in two games against Detroit (becoming just the seventh player to make his MLB debut in a post-season contest).

DeLauter  was a first-round pick (16 overall) in the 2022 MLB Draft, out of James Madison University  (where he hit .402-15-70 in three seasons (66 games). In three minor-league campaigns (138 games), he hit .302-20-87 .

Chasing a Good Story

Chase DeLauter hit four home runs in his  first three games (March 26-28) – going .357-4-5 in that span –  and joining Trevor Story (2016 Rockies) as one of two players to homer four times in their first three MLB regular-season games). DeLauter went one-for-three (a single) in his fourth game. That provided a bit of historic separation for Story, who  homered twice in his fourth MLB game (making him the only player with six long balls in his first four MLB games … #InBaseballWeCountEverything.) DeLauter ended April at .257-5-18.

On March 31, Diamondbacks 22-year-old rookie 3B Jose Fernandez (called up to replace and injured Pavin Smith)  also went deep twice in his MLB debut.  Fernandez, batting in the number-six hole, singled (off the Tigers’ Casey Mize) in the bottom of the second; hit a solo homer to left off Mize in the fourth; struck out (off Drew Anderson) in the seventh; and, in the eighth, hit a three-run homer to left-center (off Tigers’ closer Kenley Jansen) to give Arizona a 7-5 lead (which proved to be the final score).

The other six players to poke a pair of long balls in their first regular-season games were (per Elias Sports Bureau): Charlie Reilly (1889 Columbus Solons); Bob Nieman (1951 St. Louis Browns); Bert Campaneris (1964 Kansas City Athletics); Mark Quinn (1999 Kansas City Royals); J.P. Arencibia (2010 Toronto Blue Jays); and Trevor Story (2016 Colorado Rockies). Story is the only one of those who, like DeLauter, accomplished the feat on Opening Day.

Give Me Five, Mate, Okay, I’ll Take Four

Tigers’ 21-year-old rookie 3B Kevin McGonigle collected four hits in his March 26 (Opening Day) MLB Debut, just one hit shy of the all-time record for an MLB-debut outing and tying the record for an MLB-debut on Opening Day.

McGonigle hit a two-run double on the first major-league pitch he ever saw  (from the Padres’ Nick Pivetta in the top of the first). He doubled (again off Pivetta in the third); singled (off Ron Marinaccio) in the fifth; popped out to third (off Bradgley “Yes that how you Spell It” Rodriguez) in the seventh; and singled in the ninth (off Wandy Peralta.)

McGonigle was signed the first Round of the 2013 MLB Draft (37th overall), out of Monsignor Bonner and Archbishop Prendergast High School in Pennsylvania). In the minor leagues, including Fall League, he hit .313-3-149, with 45 steals (202 games).  The 21-year-old ended April at .328-2-13.

Two-for-Five

Two players have collected five hits in their major-league debuts: Fred Clarke of the 1894 Louisville Colonels (nine innings) and  Cecil Travis of the 1933 Nationals (12 innings). 

One For The Record Books

Photo: Drovetochicago, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia CommonsOn March 26, Brewers’ flame-throwing righty  Jacob Misiorowski got his first Opening Day Start – and he made the most of it.  Misiorowski, popularly called “The Miz”, fanned 11 White Sox batters in just five innings to set a new Brewers’ Opening Day high for Ks.  After giving up a home run to the first batter he faced in the 2026 season (White Sox 2B Chase Meidroth), Misiorowski fanned the numbers two, three and four hitters (SS Colson Montgomery, 3B Miguel Vargas and DH Andrew Benintendi) in succession. He fanned two more in the second; two in the third; three in the fourth and one in the fifth.

And The Miz wasn’t the only one having a good day in Milwaukee. The four relievers who followed Misiorowski to the mound added another nine strikeouts in their four innings – tying the MLB record for total strikeouts in a nine-inning game.  AND, the Brewers’ lineup contributed 12 hits  and 14 runs) as the Brew Crew triumphed 14-2 in front of 43,001 ecstatic fans (at least I think most were ecstatic).

Side Note: One April 25, Misiorowski started against the Pirates (in Milwaukee) and (as Ebby Calvin “Nuke” Laloosh, would have said ) “announced his presence with authority” early on. He fanned the first batter of the game, Pirates’ CF Oneil Cruz, on a 1-2 102.7 MPH four-seam fastball.  It was the fastest pitch for a strikeout by a starter since tracking began in 2008. “InBaseballWeTrackEverything.”

Do You Remember?

Jacob  Misiorowski made his MLB debut, as a 23-year-old,  on June 12, 2025.  At the time, he was 4-2, 2.13 at Triple-A Nashville, with 80 strikeouts (31 walks) in 63 1/3 innings.  With the Brewers, he  immediately began lighting up radar guns. His first two MLB pitches were clocked at 100.5- and 101.8-mph. In his first start, he reached triple-digits (100-mph or better) on 14 pitches. Next time out, he threw 29 triple-digit heaters over six-plus frames (he faced two batters in the seventh) – and he didn’t surrender a hit over his first 11 MLB innings.

In his first five MLB outings, Misiorowski went 4-1, 2.81, with 33 strikeouts in 25 2/3 innings.  Then came some startling (to some) news. On July 12, MLB announced that Misiorowski was going to join the NL All Star squad (as a replacement for the Cubs’ Matthew Boyd) for the July 15 All Star Game. It was the fewest number of games played  ever for an All Star selection … and there were those who maintained the honor should have gone to a more experienced hurler. 

The Miz, however,  shook it off – and didn’t disappoint. He pitched the eighth inning of the All Star Game, facing four batters (one single, three flyouts) and threw nine of his 18 pitches at 100+mph, the fastest at 103.3-mph.  He finished the 2025 season at 5-3, 4.36, with 87 strikeouts (33 walks) in 66 innings pitched. 

Blue Jays’ Kevin Gausman Rolls an Opening-Day Eleven

The Blue Jays opened the 2016 season at home against the A’s, with ace Kevin Gausman on the mound – and, like Jacob Misiorowski (above), he brought his A-Game to the A’s. Gausman went six innings, giving up one  hit and one run (a fourth-inning home run by A’s C Shea Langelier). Over his six frames, he also fanned eleven batters – setting a new Blue Jays’ record for strikeouts on Opening Day., Gausman, however, did not get the win (the Blue Jays triumphed 3-2, on a walk-off RBI single by SS Andres Gimenez with two out in the bottom of the ninth).

Langelier, by the way, drove in (and sored) both A’s runs – on a pair of Opening Day, solo homers; becoming just the fourth A’s player with a multi-homer Opening Day (Jason Giambi, 2000, two homers); Khris Davis, 2017, three homers); Tyler Soderstrom, 2025, two homers). Langeliers is coming off a solid .277-31-72 seasons in 2025 – and was .328-8-15 at the end of April

Mariners Going For a Little Extra

Over their first two games of the 2026 season, the Seattle Mariners collected nine hits and nary a single – becoming the first team in the Modern Era to go through the first two games of the season without a single single, and just the ninth team to have zero singles over any two-game span. Over those two contests (which they split), Mariners’ batters delivered two doubles, one triple and six home runs. The Mariners finally collected their first single of the season on March 28, in the third inning of their third game (Cal Raleigh) … their eleventh hit of the new season.

A Perfect Ten

Nationals’ outfielder Joey Wiemer (who came into the season with a career .205 MLB batting average … in 448 at bats over three seasons) got off to a pretty good start in 2026.

  • On March 26, he went home run, walk, single, single as the Nationals topped the Cubs 10-4;
  • On March 27, he did not play, as the Nationals lost to the Cubs 2-10;
  • March 28, back in the lineup, Wiemer went home run, triple, walk, single in a Nats’ 6-3 win over the Cubs;
  • On March 29, it was single, single, groundout, flyout, walk in a 13-2 win over the Phillies.

If you look closely that those results, you will see that Wiemer reached base safely in his first ten plate appearances of the 2026 season.  That tied Carlos Delgado (2002) for the most consecutive plate appearances to reach base safely to start a season in the live-ball ERA (since 1920). Yes, again in baseball we count everything, and also accept many qualifiers.

Celebrating 50 with 50

The Blue Jays are celebrating their franchise’s 50th Anniversary and they got off to a pretty good start. They opened the season, with a three-game, home-field sweep of the A’s (3-2. 8-7 and 5-2 on March 27,28 29). In the process, Blue Jays’ hurlers fanned fifty batters over the three games – the most strikeouts recorded by an MLB team in its first three games of a season EVER.  In the first game, four Blue Jays pitchers recorded 16 strikeouts (led by starter Kevin Gausman’s 11 in six innings). In Game Two, an 11-inning affair, eight Blue Jays hurlers recorded 19 strikeouts (led by starter Dylan Cease’s 12 in 5 1/3 innings); In Game Three, five Blue Jays’ moundsmen fanned 15 batters (led by starter Eric Lauer’s nine in 5 1/3 innings).

Happy Birthday To Me

March 28, was Dodgers’ C Will Smith’s 31st birthday. It was also the night the Dodgers were handing out bobbleheads celebrating Smith’s go-ahead homer in Game Seven of the 2025 World Series. Keeping with what seems to be a power theme in 2026 (homers and strikeouts), Smith celebrated in style. Popping an eighth-inning, two-run, go-ahead home run that provided the margin in a 3-2 Dodgers’ win over the Diamondbacks.

2026’s First Immaculate Inning

On March 30, the Diamondbacks picked up their first win of the new season – a 9-6 triumph over the Tigers. In the top of the fifth inning of that game, with the Diamondbacks already up 5-0, D-backs’ starter Mike Soroka gave the fans an extra “treat” – tossing the first Immaculate Inning (three-up, three-down, nine pitches, three strikeouts) of the 2026 season. Soroka’s victims were Tigers’ 9-1-2 hitters (SS Javier Baez, RF Kerry Carpenter, and 2B Gleyber Torres). All three went down swinging. In keeping with 2026’s early theme of strikeouts and home runs, Soroka tied his career high for strikeouts in a game, fanning ten in five innings (four hits, one walk, no runs).

You Fellas Catch On Fast

The first 2026 MLB Player of the Week awards (for March 25-29) went to Guardians’ OF Chase DeLauter and the Reds’ 1B Sal Stewart. Not only were they both from Ohio-based teams, their recognitions marked just the second time that a pair of rookies won a season’s inaugural Player of the Week Awards (after the Rockies’ Trevor Story and Astros’ Tyler White in 2016).

DeLauter went 6-for-17 (.353) with four home runs, five RBI and five runs scored in four games. Stewart went 7-for-10 (.700), with a home run, three doubles, two runs scored and two RBI in three games.

The International Game

From March 30 through April 1, the Dodgers starting pitcher were Roki Sasaki, Shohei Ohtani, and Yoshinobu Yamamoto. See a pattern here? Elias Sports Bureau reports that it’s the first time an MLB team has started Japanese-born pitchers in three consecutive games. More #InBasebvallWeCountEverything.

April Fool’s Day, Appropriately

April 1 saw the first MLB game to end on a challenging note – a strikeout produced by the new ABS challenge process. (Fortunately, it was not a one-run ball game.) It happened with the Texas Rangers at bat in the bottom of the ninth inning, with two outs, no one on base, Texas down 8-3 and Rangers’ CF  Evan Carter facing the Orioles’ Albert Suarez.  Suarez delivered a high fastball to Carter on a 1-2 count. The pitch was originally called a ball by home plate umpire Manny Gonzalez, but Orioles’ catcher Sam Basallo challenged the call and, upon review, the pitch was ruled not high, but high in the zone, for a game-ending strikeout.  Side note:  The Roundtable is not a fan of the challenge system.

Wow, I Thought It Would Be Harder Than This

Giants’ 24-year-old  rookie catcher Daniel Susac made his first MLB plate appearances on April 2 (he did play three innings behind the plate on April 1). Here’s how his plate appearances on April 2 went: leadoff single in the second; single in the third; walk in the fifth; single in the seventh. His next plate appearances came on April 7, and he delivered another single in the second inning; another single in the fifth. Finally, in the seventh inning of that contest, he flied out to right.  But in his first six MLB plate appearances: five singles and a walk. That singles him out for an appearance in these highlights.

Susac finished April at .478-0-5 in 11 games.  In 2025, at Triple-A Las Vegas, he was .275-18-68 in 97 games.

The Home run That Was … Three That Weren’t … A Sweet Adell-line

As the Angels faced off against the Mariners (in Seattle) on April 4, Angels’ SS and  leadoff hitter Zach Neto got them off to a good start. Neto homered on the third pitch of the game (an 0-2 pitch  from Mariners’ starter Emerson Hancock) in the bottom of the first to give LA a 1-0 lead. That lead held up for a 1-0 Angels’ win, thanks to a sweet show by Angels right-fielder Jo Adell. Adell went high above the RF wall – and even into the right field stands to rob the Mariners not just of one, or two, but three home runs.

In the first frame, it was a leaping catch above the home run marker on the right field wall to rob Seattle C Cal Raleigh of a home run. In the eighth, another Adell leaping grab at the limits of the outfield, took a home run away from 1B Josh Naylor.  Then, Adell topped it off, with a ninth-inning catch, on a long fly off the bat of SS J.P. Crawford that ended with Adell, ball in glove, clearing the lower wall near the RF foul pole and  landing among the  fans in the right field seats. Three Adell robberies and — Game, Set , Match.

In an MLB.com article, Jared Greenspan reports that , after the game, Angels’ Manager Kurt Suzuki termed the contest “The Jo Show’ and Angels’ Special Assistant Torii Hunter (himself a nine-time Gold Glover and master of the home-run steal) termed it “the greatest defensive game I’ve ever seen.”

How big of a deal was this? The glove Adell used in his Tri-Way Robbery is now at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown.

Bullpen By Committee, Indeed

From April 6 through April 9, the Twins put together a four-game winning streak. Now, that’s not exactly highlight-worthy.  What is,  however, is the fact that over that time, they recorded four saves – each by a different pitcher (and, in each case, it was their first save of the season).  It started with an April 6, 7-3 win over the Tigers (in Minnesota), with Cody Lawyerson  going 1 2/3 scoreless innings for his first career save. On April 7, the Twins topped the Tigers 4-2, with the save going to righty Justin Topa (2/3 of an innings, also scoreless). Then, on April 8, the Twins topped Detroit 8-6, with the save going to Kody Funderburk (Topa and Lawyerson also pitched in that game). Funderburk, like Topa, pitched 2/3 of an inning (scoreless).  On April 9, it was Eric Orze’s turn, and he pitched one scoreless frame, getting the save, as the Twins topped the Tigers 3-1.

More #InBaseballWeCount(andtrack)Everything

On April 10, the Dodgers’ 3B Max Muncy muscled LA to an 8-7 win over the Rangers (in LA). Muncy went four-for-five, scored four runs and drove in three. His hits included a solo homer in the second inning; a solo home run in the fourth; and a walk-off solo homer, on an 0-2 pitch, with two outs in the bottom of the ninth. (That last one had to be a shocker to the Rangers. Reliever Jacob Latz had come in and fanned C Will Smith and 1B Freddie Freeman, before getting Muncy down 0-2.) Post-game reports from the Elias Sports Bureau indicated that only one other Dodger has had a three-homer game that included a walk-off shot:  CF Don Demeter, versus the Giants in an April 21, 1959 9-7 Dodger win in LA.  In that one, Demeter went three-for-five, with three runs scored and six RBI.

Should Jose Ask For A Trade

On April 11, the Guardian’s Jose Ramirez popped a first-inning solo home run off an 0-2 pitch from Braves’ starter Martin Perez. Not only was it the first run in an eventual 6-0 Cleveland win, it was Ramirez’ first home run off an Atlanta pitcher – and gave Ramirez – who has played all 14 of his MLB seasons for Cleveland, the distinction of being the first player with a regular-season homer against all the other (29) MLB franchises while in a Cleveland uniform (Elias Sports Bureau).  For those who are interested in such things, 87 players have homered (regular season) against all thirty franchises in their careers.  The first was Ellis Burks, who completed the tour in April of 2000. The most recent was Trevor Story, who put notch number 30 on his belt last September.

Coincidence? The Evidence Says Otherwise.

On April 14, the Cubs topped the Phillies 10-4 in Philadelphia, setting a pair  of streaks in motion.  The Cubs would not lose another game until April 25, while the Phillies would lose every game until April 25 – a ten-game winning streak for Chicago and a ten-game losing streak for Philadelphia. You can wave off “coincidence” in this one.  In the course of the two streaks, the Cubs and Phillies faced each other six times (six wins, of course, for Chicago – six losses for Philadelphia). In those six games, the Cubs outscored the Phillies   48-20.

From April 10 through April 24, in their ten-game losing streak (five home and five road games), the Phillies  were outscored 69-26, outhit .298-to-.202, outhomered 17-to-12 and put up a 6.77 earned run average to their opponents’ 2.27.  In that same time period, the Cubs ten-game winning streak (seven home and three road games), Chicago outscored  their opponents 72-to-21, outhit them .324-to-.220, outhomered them 17-to-10 and put up a 2.93 ERA to the opponents’ 6.91.

Climbing The Ladder … Big Steps Ahead

On April 14, Tigers’ closer Kenley Jansen, picked up his third  save of the season,  tossing a scoreless ninth (one hit), as Detroit bested Kansas City 2-1. Even more notably, it was his 479th career save, moving him into sole position of third place on the all-time saves list (passing Lee Smith).   The next targets for the 38-year-old righty are off in the distance. Ahead of Jansen on the saves list are: Mariano Rivera (652 saves) and Trevor Hoffman (601 saves). Jansen has, as of late, become a bit of a traveling savesman. After saving 350 games for the Dodgers from 2010 through 2022, he has found himself closing out games for the Braves (2022), Red Sox (2023-24), Angels (2025) and Tigers.

Trout Takes A Bite Out Of The Big Apple

As the Yankees and Angels split a four-game series in New York (April 13-16), the Angels’ Mike Trout wrote a new chapter in Yankee Stadium history – becoming just the second visiting  player to homer in four straight  games in Yankee Stadium (tying John Mayberry Sr., 1972) .  Over the four-game series, Trout went  six-for-sixteen (.375) with five home runs and nine RBI. His five homers were also the most ever in a regular-season series against the Yankees in New York. George Bell (1990), Darrell Evans (1985) and Jimmie Fox (1933) also hit five homers in a series against the Bronx Bombers, but those were Toronto, Detroit and Philadelphia, respectively.

Hang The Bunting, It’s a Win

Op April 16, the Brewers took “small ball” to a new level. Tied with the Blue Jays 1-1 in the bottom of the seventh, Brewers’ PH Garrett Mitchell drew an inning opening walk on a 3-2 pitch from Tommy Nance. Greg Jones then bunted, sacrificing Mitchell to second. Joe Mantiply came in to pitch and, on his first pitch, David Hamilton laid down a beautiful bunt (for a base hit), moving Mitchell to third.  SS Joey Ortiz next bunted (a sacrifice) scoring Mitchell, before Brandon  Lockridge struck out to end the inning – and Milwaukee made that run (scored on a walk and three consecutive bunts) hold up for a 2-1 win.  That’s small ball.

Worth The Wait … A Feel-Good Story

After toiling seven years and 700 games in the minors, Ryan Ward finally got his call to “The Show.”  He started at first base in his first MLB game on April 19  (for the Dodgers versus the Rockies) and went two-for-five with one RBI.   An eighth-round pick in the 2019 draft out of Bryant University (where he hit .383-23-111 in 124 games over three seasons), Ward hit .266-154-524 over seven minor-league campaigns.

Let’s Get This Party Started

On April 20, as the Dodgers crushed the Rockies 12-3, Dodgers’ 1B (he also plays catcher) Dalton Rushing went 2-for-5, with two runs scored and three RBI – bringing his stat line to .444-7-13 over his first eight games of 2026. That put Rushing in a tie (with Trevor Story, 2016) for the second-most long balls in a player’s first eight games of a season (one behind Mike Schmidt, 1976).  Just a bit more of  #InBaseballWeCountEverything.  Rushing – a 2022 second-round draft pick  out of the University of a Louisville – made his MLB debut in 2025, going .204—2-24 on 53 games for LA.

Ha! Ya Missed Me!

Cardinals’ second baseman JJ Weatherholt was probably happy to avoid a “hit” on April 21.  The game saw an end to his streak of getting hit by a pitch.  From April 15 through April 19, he was nailed in five consecutive games  … one game short of the Modern-Era record (Carlos Quentin, 2008 White Sox). Over his streak, Wetherholt hit .214 (3-for-14), but had a .500 on-base percentage, thanks to four walks and his five HBP.

Will April Never Be Over?

On April 22, the Mets had cause for celebration, after squeaking out a 3-2 win in front of 32.665 fan at Citi Field. It marked the Mets’ first victory  since April 7 – a 12-game losing streak in which the Mets – with a payroll second in MLB only to the Dodgers – looked absolutely lost (pun intended). Over that 12-game span, the Mets were outscored 67-21; outhit .257-to-.194; outhomered 15-to-8; and put up a 6.22 earned run average to their opponents’ 1.65.  The losing streak included six home and six road games; three one-run games (one in extra frames); three shutouts; and eight games in which the Mets scored two or fewer runs.

Side note:  The night before, in a Mets 5-3 loss to the Twins, I saw (watched on TV) how truly difficult it can be to play in the Big Apple. In that one, the Mets took a 3-0 lead into the fifth before the Twins mounted the comeback that would eventually lead to their victory. As the Twins clawed their way back in, Mets’ fans – a significant number with brown paper bags over their heads – began booing their home team with an energy I had not before  seen directed at a home squad.  Noisy displeasure continued – and rose in volume – until the Twins had a two-run lead, with the bases loaded and not outs in the top of the ninth. At that point,  Mets’ reliever Austin Warren was brought into the game and, when he struck out the first batter he faced, the fans began a sarcastic chant of “MVP, MVP.” Warren, however, was not rattled, as he fanned three consecutive batters with the sacks full to hold the Twins lead at two.

The Mets, by the way, ended April with a 10-21, the worst record MLB.

Something Weird. Right Off The Bat.

On April 22, in the top of the first inning of an eventual Mariners 5-4 win over the Athletics, the baseball Gods, provided 15,704 fans a play they will never forget,  Logan Gilbert was on the mound for the Mariners and had given up a walk to Athletics leadoff hitter  Nick Kurtz and a single to C Shea Langeliers (sending Kurtz to third). Next up was Carlos Cortez, who hit a 2-1 pitch right on the button – and right up the middle into Gilbert’s shirt. Gilbert, not knowing exactly where the ball had lodged, search the mound area for the ball, before realizing it was stuck in his shirt. The call? Based on the rule that a batted ball going inside a player’s or coach’s uniform is “out of play,” the batter is credited with a hit and any runners are placed at the umpire’s discretion. So, Cortez was credited with a base hit, Langeliers moved to second, but (via umpire discretion) Kurtz was kept at third. (Both runners eventually scored). I wonder how many fans, fifteen seasons from now, will claim to have been in the stands that day?

Below is a YouTube video from Swing and Miss:

 

Boomer Murakami … More Home Run Talk

From April 17 through April 22, White Sox 26-year-old rookie 1B Munetaka Murakami (signed by the ChiSox out of Japan, where he was a two-time MVP and four-time All Star) homered in five straight games, going .500 (11-for-22), with five home runs, ten RBI and seven runs scored in that span). In the process, he tied the MLB rookie record for consecutive games with a home run. Murakami ended April at  .236-12-23, his 12 omers tying for the MLB lead.

Munetaka Murakami finished April tied for the MLB lead in home runs with 12. Notably, he had just 12 extra-base hits in March April – all, of course, homers.  

All Good Things Must Come To An End

On April 22,  as the Dodgers lost to the Giants in San Francisco, Shohei Ohtani failed to reach base in a game in which he batted for the first time since August 23, 2025.  That’s a pretty good achievement for a guy who can also bring the heat from the mound. The on-base record, by the way, belongs to Ted Williams, who reached base in 84 consecutive games from July 1, 1949 to September 27 1949. During his streak, Williams hit .371-24-80.  During nis streak, Ohtani batted .279-16-30.

First, He Didn’t Walk, Then He Had To Run

On April 23, Ranger CF Evan Carter came to the plate in the bottom third inning of a scoreless game against the Pirates with a runner on first and two out. With a three-and-one count, he took what he thought was ball four (as did the ump) and prepared for a leisurely stroll to first base.  Just a second there, Bucco! Pirates’ catcher Joey Bart challenged the call and it became strike two.  Back at the plate, Carter smacked the next pitch to deep right-center, where it bounced off RF Ryan O’Hearn’s glove, caromed off the centerfield wall and was retrieved by CF Oneil Cruz. Carter, meanwhile, replaced his original stroll to first base with a mad dash around the bases, sliding head first into home plate with the first inside-the-park homer of his career.

April Showers … Birds’ Homers

On April 24, the Orioles gave 26,776 fans at Camden Yards an April treat. No only did they even their record at 13-13 with a 10-3 win over the Red Sox, they delivered an April shower of hits (20) and home runs (six). The game saw two homers by C  Adley Rutschman and one each by SS Gunnar Henderson, RF Dylan Beavers, DH Sam Basallo and 3B Coby Mayo – and five Orioles collected  three or more base hits.

Not Much Time To Celebrate.

On April 25, the Red Sox – suffering through a rough (9-17) start to the season –  exploded for  for a 17-1 win over the Orioles in Baltimore.  The Sox put an exclamation point on the final inning of the game, scoring ten runs in the ninth frame on ten hits (including a Grand Slam by DH Andruw Monasterio,  a two-run shot by 3B Caleb Durbin and a three-run blast by  1B Willson Contreras). It was the first time in team history that the Sox had launched three ninth-inning home runs and just the second time Boston had plated ten ninth-inning runs. Every coin has two sides: The final four runs were charged to infielder Weston Wilson, making his fourth career mound appearance, and the  17 runs also matched the Red Sox’ total scoring over the previous seven games (one win and six losses).

The Red Sox did not have much to celebrate the breakout victory. Later that same day, the last-place Red Sox announced the firing of manager Alex Cora and five members of his coaching staff, as well as the reassignment of a sixth coach.

My (Banana) Dreams Are Shattered

April 27, the  Guardians announced  they were calling up 2B  Travis Bazzana, the first overall pick in the 2024 MLB draft, out of Oregon State University – where he hit .360-45-165, with 66 steals in three seasons (184 games).  Bazzano was hitting .287-2-10, with eight steals at Triple-A at the time of the announcement. I wish him luck in the majors, but my dream of seeing Travis Bazzana on the field for the Savannah Bananas have been dashed.

Mason Miller Finally Gives One Up

On April 27, Padres’ hard-throwing reliever Mason Miller  finally gave up a run, stopping a 34 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings streak that goes back to August 6 of last season – a stretch of 33 games, 34 2/3 innings, 11 walks, 69 strikeouts, one win, 12 saves and nine holds.

Called in for the bottom of the ninth, with his Padres up 9-5 over the Cubs, Mason’s inning went: single; single; single (loading the bases); forceout at second (run scores); wild pitch (another run scores); groundout; strikeout. (In all fairness, the first single was on a slow roller down the third baseline that appeared to roll foul.)

For those who like to know such things, the longest stretch of consecutive scoreless innings by a reliever is 41 (Gregg Olson, Orioles (August 4, 1989-May 4, 1990). For a pitcher, any role, the record is 59 consecutive scoreless innings by Orel Hershiser, Dodgers (August 30-September 28, 1988).

From Both Sides Now

On  April 28, White Sox C Drew Romo hit the first two homers of his three-season MLB career (in his 30th career game). They deserve a note here because Romo (batting ninth), homered from the left-handed batter’s box (on an 0-2 pitch from the Angels’ Jose Soriano) in the bottom of the fourth and, in his next at bat, in the bottom of the sixth, from the right-handed batter’s box (on an 0-0 pitch from Brent Suter). Romo is just the seventh player to record their first two home runs, in the same game, from opposite sides of the plate – and one of only three (joining Yasmani Grandal and U.L. Washington) to accomplish the feat in consecutive plate appearances. More #InBaseballWeCountEverything. (The Sox won the game 5-2).

I Walk The Line … A Lot

From April 10 through April 30, A’s   1B Nick Kurtz drew at least one walk in  19 consecutive games – an active streak as he goes into May. His line over that span: (16-for-65) .246-5-13, with 24 walks, 25 strikeouts and a .449 on-base percentage. For those who like to know such things, the record for the most consecutive games drawing a walk (22) belongs to the Tigers’ R0y Cullenbine (1947).

Another Streak

You can read more about tis in the Surprise Player of the Month section near the top of this post, but Red utility player Ildemaro Vargas, closed out April with an active 23-game, season -opening hitting streak (and an active 26-game streak darting back to the end of 2025.

Mattingly For The Win

On April 28, the Phillies (with a 9-19 record) parted ways with manager Rob Thomson and brought in interim-manager Don Mattingly. The Philadelphia squad won its first game under Mattingly (April 28) 7-0 over the Giants (in Philadelphia).  Then, on April 30, they notched a pair of walk-off wins (3-2 and 6-5 in ten innings) in a split doubleheader, giving Mattingly a 3-0 record at the helm. It marked the first time the Phillies notched two walk-off wins in the same day since 1998 and the first time any team notched two walk-off wins in the same day since the Pirates in 2004.

 

–INDIVIDUAL STAT LEADERS FOR March/April—

BATTING AVERAGE (at least 75 at bats)

American League:  Jordan Alvarez, Astros (.356); Vlad Guerrero, Jr., Blue Jays (,354);  Yandy Diaz, Rays (.330)

National League: Ildemaro Vargas, D-backs (.378); Xavier Edwards, Marlins (.336); Jose Fernandez, D-backs (.325)

The lowest March/April average among players with at least 75 at bats belonged to the Rays’ Cedric Mullins at .126 (12-for-95).

HITS

American League: Yordan Alvarez, Astros (42); Shea Langeliers, Athletics (41); Vlad Guerrero, Jr., Blue Jays (40)

National League: Ozzie Albies, Braves (40); Drake Baldwin, Braves (40); Xavier Edwards, Marlins (38); Otto Lopez, Marlins (38)

The Braves’ Matt Olson led all MLBers in March/April extra-base hits with 22 – 13 doubles and five home runs.  

HOME RUNS

American League: Yordan Alvarez, Astros (12); Aaron Judge, Yankees (12); Munetaka Murakami, White Sox (12)

National League: Kyle Schwarber, Phillies (10=1); James Wood, Nationals (10); Elly De La Cruz, Reds (10) ;

The Astros’ Yordan Alvarez led all players with at least 75 March/April at bats in slugging percentage at .737. The D-backs Ildemaro Vargas led the NL at .689.

RUNS BATTED IN

American League: Yordan Alvarez, Astros (27); Jonathan Aranda, Rays (25); Christian Walker, Astros (24); Jeremiah Jackson, Orioles (24)

National League: Sal Stewart, Reds (29); Matt Olson, Braves (28); Liam Hicks, Marlins (28)

RUNS SCORED

American League:  Mike Trout, Angels (29); Ben Rice, Yankees (26); Yordan Alvarez, Astros (25); Aaron Judge,Yankees (25)

National League: Drake Baldwin, Braves (30); James Wood, Nationals (30); Matt Olson, Braves (27);  JJ Wetherholt, Cardinals (27)

DOUBLES

American League: Ernie Clement, Blue Jays (13); Taylor Ward, Orioles (13); Josh Jung, Rangers (11); Kevin McGonigle, Tigers (11)

National League: Matt Olson, Braves (13); Willy Adames, Giants (10); Gavin Sheets, Padres (9)

TRIPLES

American League:  Nine with two

National League: Corbin Carroll, D-backs (4); Geraldo Perdomo, D-backs (3); nine with two

STOLEN BASES

American League:  Jose Caballero, Yankees (12); Jose Ramirez, Guardians (12); Chandler Simpson, Rays (11)

National League: Nasim Nunez, Nationals (14); Oneil Cruz, Pirates (10); Jakob Marsee, Marlins (10)

The Guardians’ Jose Ramirez  stole the most March/April bases without getting caught (12).

BATTER’S STRIKEOUTS

American League:  Zack Neto, Angels (47); Munetaka Murakami, White Sox (46); Nick Kurtz, Athletics (45)

National League: James Wood, Nationals (50); Oneil Cruz, Pirates (48); Hunter Goodman, Rockies (46)

WALKS

American League:  Nick Kurtz, Athletics (33); Mike Trout, Angels (32); Taylor Ward, Orioles (27)

National League: James Wood, Nationals (31); Ivan Herrera, Cardinals (25); Bryan Reynolds, Pirates (25)

The Highest on-base percentage among players with at least 75 March/April at bats was .462, by the Astros’ Yordan Alvarez. The NL leader was the Marlins’ Xaviere Edwards at .432.

__________________________________

PITCHING VICTORIES

American League:  Jose Soriano, Angels (5-1); Gavin Williams, Guardians (5-1); five with 4

National League:  Aaron Ashby, Brewers (5-0); Landen Roupp, Giants (5-1); Chris Sale, Braves (5-1)

Twelve MLB pitchers finished March/April with four losses.

EARNED RUN AVERAGE (minimum 25 March/April innings)

American League: Jose Soriano, Angels (0.84); Cam Schlittler, Yankees (1.51); Nick Martinez, Rays (1.70)

National League: Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers (0.60); Justin Wrobleski, Dodgers (1.50): Clay Holmes, Mets, 1.75. (1.88)

STRIKEOUTS

American League: Gavin Williams, Guardians (53K / 43 1/3 IP); Dylan Cease, Blue Jays (49K / 31 1/3 IP); Jose Soriano, Angels (49K / 41 2/3 IP); Cam Schlittler, Yankees (49K / 41 2/3 IP)

National League: Jacob Misiorowski, Brewers (51K / 32 2/3 IP); Christopher Sanchez, Phillies (50K / 40 1/3 IP);  Tyler Glasnow, Dodgers (47K / 38 2/3 IP)

WALKS + HITS/INNINGS PITCHED (at least 25 March/April innings)

American League: Cam Schlittler, Yankees (0.74); Max Fried,m Yankees (0.80); Drew Rasmussen, Rays (0.85)

National League: Tyler Glasnow, Dodgers (0.83); Nolan McLean, Mets (0.85); Paul Skenes, Pirates (0.85)

Among pitchers with at least 25 March/April innings, the Dodgers’ Tyler Glasnow held batters to the lowest average at .146.

SAVES

American League:  David Bednar, Yankees (9); five with seven

National League:  Mason Miller, Padres (10); Riley O’Brien, Cardinals (8) ; Paul Sewald, D-backs (7)

Mason Miller of the Padres saved the most games without a blown save in March/April (ten).  

Bonus:

Among pitchers who faced at least 75 batters in March/April:

  • The Blue Jays’ Dylan Cease fanned the most batters per nine innings at 14.07, the Brewers Jacob Misiorowski was right on his tail at 14.05;
  • The Yankees’ Cam Schlittler had the best strikeouts-to-walks ratio at 8.17. (He walked six batters and fanned 419 in 41 2/3 innings.)

Zack Littell of the Nationals gave up the most March/April home runs … 13 roundtrippers in 28 2/3 innings. 

 

Primary Resources: MLB.com; Stathead.com; Get To Know D-Backs Top Pick Druw Jones, by Manny Randhawa;  Highest Major League Baseball Payrolls and Player Salaries for 2026 Season, by Kyle Koster, Sports Illustrated.

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Baseball Roundtable Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday … MLB’s Longest Season-Opening Losing Streak

It’s Tuesday and that means it’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye.  (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.

Last week, we looked at the only MLB pitcher to win 20 or more games AND two World Series games in a rookie season. For that post, click here. This week, we’re looking at the longest season-opening losing streak in MLB  history.

On this date (April 28) in 1988, the Baltimore Orioles were in town, facing off against my Minnesota Twins in the Metrodome. It was a fairly nondescript game, a Twins 4-2 win in front of 23,006 fans.  Each team had six hits, with the Twins scoring on a tw0-run fourth-inning homer by 1B Kent Hrbek and a two-run, sixth-inning double by LF John Moses – and the Orioles scoring on a first-inning groundout by 1B Eddie Murray (on which LF Tito Landrum scored) and a fourth-inning, bases-loaded walk (Mike Mason pitching to Landrum).  Mike Boddicker was the losing pitcher; Allan Anderson got the win.

So why is this game worth a tidbit? Because, on that day, the Twins handed the Orioles’ their twenty-first consecutive loss (from the start of the season) – still the record for the deepest into a season any team has gone without a win. The very next day, the Orioles broke the losing streak with a 9-0 win over the White Sox, but history was made. This tidbit takes a look at the Orioles record-breaking start to the 1988 season. Orioles’ fans may want to look away.

There were of a pair Ripkens on the 1988 Orioles: SS Cal Ripken, Jr.; and 2B/3B Billy Ripken.

First, coming into that 21st game, the 0-20 Orioles were (of course) 16 games out of first place just 20 games into the season. (They would go on to finish 54-107, 34 ½ games out of first.) The leadoff hitter for Baltimore that day (names are omitted to protect the innocent) was hitting just .091 and there were four sub-.200 hitters in the lineup.  No player in the Oriole lineup had more than two home runs, nor more than six RBI. The starting pitcher was 0-4, 7.40. Side note: After suffering that 21st loss, the Orioles moved on to Chicago, where they won the first game of a three-game series 9-0.  

Cal Ripken Sr. opened the 1988 season as the Orioles’ manager, coming off a 67-95 1987 season, but was let go after an 0-6 start (during which the Orioles were outscored 43-to-7), with Frank Robinson taking over the team.

To truly understand the depth of Baltimore’s start to the 1988 season, you have to look at the 21-game, season-opening losing streak as a whole.  First, there hints of disaster right from the start. The Orioles opened at home, against the Brewers, and treated 52,395 fans to a 12-0 loss. A portent of things to come?

In their first 21 games, the Orioles were:

  • Outscored 129-44;
  • Outhit .311-to-.193;
  • Outhomered 21-9;
  • Put up a 5.92 earned run average to the opponents’ 2.02; and
  • Made 21 errors to the opposition’s 12.

The streak consisted of 13 road games and eight home contests.  The Orioles scored one run or less in ten games (shutout three times) and lost seven games by five or more runs.

The streak included five one-run losses (one extra-inning game). In one particular point in the streak (games 9-11), the Orioles suffered three tough one-run home losses.

  • On April 14, they lost to the Royals 4-3, when Kansas City scored the winning run on an outfield error with two outs in the top of the ninth inning (and the game knotted at three apiece.)
  • On April 15, they lost 3-2 to the Indians, after leading 2-1 through the seventh inning.
  • On April 16, they lost a heartbreaker 1-0 to the Indians in eleven innings, despite outhitting Cleveland 8-3.  In that one, the go-ahead run scored on a two-out single, after a pair of walks and a passed ball.  The Orioles had a chance in the bottom of the eleventh frame, with runners on second and third with just one out, but could not push a run across.

The only regular-season MLB losing streaks longer than the Orioles’ 1988 season-opening belong to the: 1889 Louisville Colonels (26 games); and 1961 Phillies (23 games), but these were not season-opening streaks.  

Primary Resource: Stathead.com

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

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Baseball Roundtable Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday … Riding a Rookie Arm, All the Way to A World Series Championship

It’s Tuesday and that means it’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye.  (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.

This week, we’re looking at an MLB “unicorn” … and the answer to the question “Who is the only MLB pitcher to win twenty games AND win two World Series games in a rookie season?”

I should note it took a while to establish these unicorn credentials. For example, I did find 33 Modern Era (post-1900) qualifying rookies who won 20 or more games –  including Grover Alexander, who set the Modern Era record for wins by a rookie with 28 (28-13, 2.57), as a 24-year-old  MLB freshman with the 1911 Phillies.  That season, Alexander led the NL in wins, complete games (31), shutouts (seven) and innings pitched (367).  I also found 11 qualifying rookies  to win two or more World Series games (including the Negro Leagues Championship Series) in a rookie season – including Charles “Babe” Adams, who won a rookie-record three games for the Pirates in the 1909 World Series (after posting a 12-3, 1.11 regular season in 1909).  Adams started Games One, Five and Seven in the Series (three starts in nine days) and went the distance in all three contests. In 27 innings  he gave up 18 hits and six walks, five runs (four earned) and fanned 11.  Note: Adams qualified as a rookie, although he had appeared in five MLB games (26 total innings) in short MLB stints in  1906 amd 1907, going 0-3, 7.96.

A Brief Diversion

The last MLB pitcher to win 20 games in a rookie season was Reds’ southpaw Tom Browning in 1985 (20-9, 3.55 in 38 starts with six complete games and four shutouts). Browning went 123-90, 3.94 in 12 MLB seasons, winning fifteen or more games in four of them.  

Photo: Wide World Photos/ Archival by La Presse, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

I, however, found just one player who both won 20 regular-season games AND two World Series games as a rookie. That would be John Beazley of the 1942 Cardinals.   Beazley went 21-6, 2.13 in the regular season and then pitched two World Series complete-game victories, as the Redbirds topped the powerful Yankees four games-to-one.  Beazley qualified as a rookie, having pitched just one game in a late 1941 call up.  After that sterling 1942 performance, Beazley pitched in four more MLB seasons, winning just nine more games (9-6, 4.39) – for an MLB career record of 31-12, 3.01.  (There were some extenuating circumstances and we’ll get into those as we take a look at Beazley’s career.)

In 1942, rookie Beazley had more wins, more appearances (43), more starts (23),  more complete games (13), more shutouts (3) and more saves (three  – recognized retroactively) than the rest of his MLB career combined.  And, despite pithing 56 2/3 more innings in 1942 than in the rest of his MLB career, he walked fewer batters and gave up fewer home runs.  (And, of course, there are  those World Series victories.)

Beazley grew up in Nashville, Tennessee and excelled on the mound in high school.  He began his pro career as a 19-year-old  and, in his first season (1937), stumbled a bit, going 7-15, 4.33 for three Class-D squads. Things did not improve greatly in 1938, with Beazley putting up 8-12, 4.53 in C- and D-Ball and, as noted in John Fuqua’s Society for American Baseball Research Beazley Bio, actually quit baseball for a time during the season. (Fuqua’s bio of Beazley provided info essential to this Tidbit.)  In 1939, Beazley was with the Class-A1 New Orleans Pelicans and, after a month of the season, was 1-3, 9.36, suffered an elbow injury, was sent to Montgomery of the Class-B Southeastern League and pitched in just one game before being sent home to rest is arm (and again contemplate leaving baseball).

Still, in 1940, he was back in New Orleans with the Ckass-A1 Pelicans, who were now part of the Cardinals’ system.  After just four appearances, Beazley was sent down to the Class-B Columbus Red Birds, where he went 5-3, 5.17, spent some time out with an injured back, and then rejoined the Columbus squad and seemed to find himself – going  4-2, 2.04 in eight games.   That performance earned him a call up to the Cardinals and he made his first MLB appearance on last day of the 1941 regular season.   In that debut, Beazley, pitched a complete game in a 3-1 win over the Cubs – giving up just one run (on ten hits and three walks), while fanning four.

In 1942, Beazley opened the season with the Cardinals, working primarily out of the bullpen (just two starts in his first 19 appearances.) He pitched  his way into the starting  rotation by  late June. (At that point, Beazley was 6-4, with a tidy 1.80 ERA in 19 appearances … and the Cardinals were 36-26, in second place – as of June 27 –  nine games behind the Dodgers.)  From Beazley’s start on June 28 through season’s end, the rookie went 15-2, with a 2.18 ERA in 24 games (21 starts, with 12 complete games and three shutouts).  Beazley and staff ace Mort Cooper help drive to the Cardinals to a 70-22 finish, a final 106-48 record and a first-place finish (two games ahead of the Dodgers).  For the season, Beazley was 21-6, 2.13 in 43 appearances (23 starts), with 13 complete games and three shutouts.)  Beazley was second in the NL in earned run average (to Cooper); second in wins (one victory behind Cooper); third in W-L percentage at .778); and third in pitching appearances (43). Cooper and Beasley were, in fact, the best 1-2 pitching punch in the NL (and the only NL pitchers to reach 20 wins that season. (Cooper was 22-7, 1.78, with 22 complete games and ten shutouts.)

Beazley put the cherry on top of his 1942 sundae in the World Series.  After the favored Yankees scored five runs (three earned) off Cooper to win Game One, Beazley picked up a complete-game win in Game Two (October 1 in St. Louis), scattering ten hits, walking two and fanning four in a 4-3 victory.  Beazley  was even better in the Championship-clinching Game Five (October 5 in New York); pitching a complete-game, seven-hitter (one walk, two strikeouts) as the Cardinals won 4-2.

Beazley appeared to be on his way – and he was, but rather into the 1943 season, it was  into the U.S. Army. In the military, Beazley spent his time (thanks again, John Fuqua) traveling from base-to-base and playing ball to entertain the troops.  It was during this heavy pitching schedule that Beazley again injured his arm – and (as the record shows) he never recovered his rookie season form. After returning from military, he pitched in four more MLB seasons, going 9-6, 4.39 in 32 games (22 starts), with seven complete games.  He spent time in the majors and minors in 1948 and 1949 and pitched solely in the minors in 1950 and 1951. His final MLB stat line was 31-12, 3.01 in 76 games (46 starts), with 21 complete games and three shutouts.

Ring ‘Em Up, Grover!

The most victories  by a rookie pitcher in the Modern Era is 28, by Grover “Pete”  Alexander (28-13, 2.57 for the 1911 Phillies. Alexander went on to win 373 MLB games (208 losses) in 20 MLB seasons (1911-30 … Phillies, Cubs, Cardinals). He won 20 or more games in nine seasons, three times winning 30 or more.

 

A Final Diversion

Since the Rookie of the Year Award was established in 1947, six pitchers have recorded 20 or more victories in a qualifying rookie season.  The only one of the six to capture Rookie Of The Year Honors was Bob Grim of the 1954 Yankees.

Primary Resources: Stathead.com; John Beazley bio, by John Fuqua, Society for American Baseball Research

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs. For the full list click here

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Baseball Roundtable Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday … A Striking Way To Open The Season

It’s time again for Baseball Roundtable’s Trivia(l) Tidbit Tuesday. I hope you are enjoying this weekly presentation of baseball occurrences that for some reason caught The Roundtable’s eye.  (I’m particularly fond of unexpected performances and statistical coincidences.) These won’t necessarily be momentous occurrences, just events, statistics or coincidences that grabbed my attention. I’m also drawn to baseball “unicorns,” one-of-a-kind MLB accomplishments or statistics.

Last week, we looked at the three players who homered in their first MLB at bat, on the first MLB pitch they ever saw – and did it as pinch hitter on Opening Day.  For one of them, it was even their team’s first-ever game as an MLB franchise.  For that post, click here.  This week, season openers again provide the impetus for The Roundtable’s Tidbits.  My attention was grabbed by the fact that 2026 saw three pitchers log ten or more strikeouts in their squads’ season openers:  Kevin Gausman, Blue Jays – 11K in six innings; Jacob Misiorowski, Brewers – 11K in five innings; and Christopher Sanchez, Phillies – 10K in six innings. In related news: MLB’s 2026 openers also saw just two pitchers throw at least seven innings: the Marlins’ Sandy Alcantara and the Orioles’ Trevor Rogers (seven innings each.) Sixteen of the 30 opener starters lasted five innings or less.

 

 

Those numbers seemed to say a lot about how mound work has changed over the seasons, so as usual, one thing led to another and Baseball Roundtable dug a little deeper. (The usual disclaimer: I focused on AL/NL stats, recognizing that the Negro Leagues’  game-by-game stats from 1920-48 have not been fully incorporated into MLB records.)

Let’s start with this chart, that shows the AL/NL Modern Era pitchers with the most double-digit strikeout openers. (All, by the way are starters, no reliever has ever recorded ten punchouts in a season opener.)

One of Those “Another Things” I Was Led To

A fun, but not super meaningful, observation for me: In 1960, as in 2026, three pitchers fanned ten or more batters in their teams’ season openers and they pitched a total of 30 1/3 innings (as opposed to this year’s three ten-strikeout openers’ 17 innings). The Senators’ Camilo Pascual fanned 15 in a nine-inning complete-game 10-1 win over the Red Sox; the Dodgers’’ Don Drysdale fanned 14 in an eleven-inning CG 3-2 win over the Cubs; and the Indians’ Gary Bell struck out 12 in 10 1/3 innings of an 11-frame 3-2 loss to the White Sox.

Perhaps more significant is that six decades later – and with the increased emphasis on strikeouts – Pascual’s 15 punchouts remains the record for a season opener. 

Now, back to our regularly scheduled blogging. Turns out, in the NL/AL’s Modern Era (post-1900), there have been a total of 86 instances (by 67 different hurlers) of a pitcher recording ten or more strikeouts in his team’s season opener. Thirty-three of those instances (38.4%) occurred in the fourteen seasons since 2012. From 2012 through 2026, there was at least one season-opener, double-digit strikeout  appearance every season and multiple such appearances in 11 seasons.  By comparison, from 2000 through 2011, there were a total of six season-opener appearances of ten or more strikeouts by a pitcher – only one season with multiple such occurrences and seven with zero.

A few other noteworthy points from 1901 through 1959, there were only ten season-opening  ten-or-more strikeout performances.  from 1971 through 1999, there were 17. There was a spike from 1960 through 1970 – 18 season-opening ten+ strikeout performances, with Bob Gibson, Mickey Lolich and Chris Short notching two each. (Keep in mind, this was the beginning of the expansion era.)

From 2012 through 2026, 7.3 percent of season-opener starts produced 10 or more strikeouts. From 1901-2011 that figure was 1.9 percent.  

Another statistic that interested me was the fact that the starting pitchers who logged at least ten strikeouts in an opener between 2020 and 2026 averaged just 5.9 innings pitched in those appearances. By comparison, in the decade of the 1980s. the figure was 8.0 innings – and as the chart below shows that figure has been on a fairly steady decade-by-decade decline since the 1960’s.

A First For Pedro

Pedro Martinez was the first pitcher to fan ten or more batters in a season opener while pitching six of fewer innings. He notched 12 strikeouts in six innings on April 4, 2005, as his Mets lost 7-3 to the Reds. Martinez gave up three runs on three hits and two walks.

A few more tidbits.

  • The last opener featuring a complete game with ten or more strikeouts and at least eight innings pitched took place on April 8, 1991, as the White Sox’ Jack McDowell, stopped the Orioles, giving up just four hits and one run (ten strikeouts) in a 9-1 win in Baltimore. (Max Scherzer fanned 10 in a season-opening loss to the Yankees in 2020, but the game went only six innings.)
  • All of the twenty-three season-opening, ten-strikeout starts of six-innings pitched or less have taken place since 2005.
  • Two seasons have seen four pitchers notch season-opener starts of ten or more strikeouts: 1970 – Mickey Lolich, Andy Messersmith, Dave McNally; Sam McDowell; and 2023 – Dylan Cease, Logan Webb, Gerrit Cole and Shohei Ohtani.
  • Between 1960 and 1969, there were fourteen season-opening 10K+ performances – eleven of those were complete games (and one was a 10 1/3-inning, non-complete game performance). The ten-plus-strikeout performances included two extra-inning complete games  and five shutouts.
  • The last pitcher to throw a season-opener shutout with at least ten strikeouts was the Expos’ Steve Rogers in 1982 – a three-hit, two-walk, ten-strikeouts 2-0 win in Philadelphia.

Season-Opener, Complete-Game, Shutouts, with Ten Or More Strikeouts

There have been just eleven single-pitcher, seasoner-opener shutouts with ten or more strikeouts and only one player has two:  Chris Short of the Phillies.   In the 1965 opener, Short fanned eleven in a 2-0, four-hit, three-walk win over the Astros in Houston. In 1968, he fanned ten in a 2-0, four-hit, zero-walk win over the Dodgers in LA. (Both were nine-inning games.) The Philly southpaw pitched in 15 MLB seasons (1959-73), all for the Phillies. The two-time All Star went 135-132, 3.43  in his MLB career, with 88 complete games and 24 shutouts.  He was a 20-game winner in 1966 (20-10, 3.54). Others to throw season-opener shutouts with ten or more whiffs: Walter Johnson, 1917 Nationals; Lon Warneke, 1934 Cubs; Bob Feller, 1946 Indians; Juan Marichal, 1962 Giants; Bob Veale, 1965 Pirates; Bob Gibson, 1967, Cardinals; Mickey Lolich, 1976 Tigers; Andy Messersmith, 1970 Angels; Steve Rogers, 1982 Expos.

Primary Resource: Stathead.com

 

Baseball Roundtable – Blogging Baseball Since 2012.

Baseball Roundtable is on the Feedspot list of the Top 100 Baseball Blogs. For the full list click here

I tweet (on X) baseball @DavidBaseballRT. Follow me for new blog post notifications.

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