In
baseball, a
home run occurs when the ball is hit in such a way that the batter is able to circle the bases and reach home safely in one play without any errors being committed by the defensive team in the process. In modern baseball, the feat is typically achieved by hitting the ball over the outfield fence between the foul poles (or making contact with either foul pole) without first touching the ground, resulting in an automatic home run. There is also the "inside-the-park" home run where the batter reaches home safely while the baseball is in play on the field.
Eighteen players have hit four home runs in a single
Major League Baseball (MLB) game, which writers of Sporting News described as "baseball's greatest single-game accomplishment".[1] The most recent to accomplish the feat to date is
J. D. Martinez with the
Arizona Diamondbacks against the
Los Angeles Dodgers on September 4, 2017. No player has done this more than once in his career. In the pre-professional era, Lipman Pike also hit five home runs in 1866. No player has ever hit four home runs in a postseason game; that record is three, first accomplished by
Babe Ruth in Game 4 of the
1926 World Series.[2]
According to the Society for American Baseball Research, Oil Cities catcher
Jay J. Clarke went 8-8 with eight home runs, a single-game professional record. However, Clarke’s total is still disputed, reported by some newspapers as three homers and eight runs scored, but there is no surviving box score to help confirm or deny his feat.
Bobby Lowe was the first to hit four home runs in a single game, doing so on May 30, 1894, for the
Boston Beaneaters.[3] Fans were reportedly so excited that they threw $160 in silver coins ($5,600 today) onto the field after his fourth home run.[1][4] Of all players to achieve the feat, Lowe hit the fewest career home runs, with a total of 71. Two years after Lowe's feat,
Ed Delahanty of the
Philadelphia Phillies became the second player to hit four home runs in a game. Two other Phillies players have achieved the feat,
Chuck Klein in 1932 and
Mike Schmidt in 1976.[5] Two other current franchises, the
Atlanta Braves (with three) and the
Los Angeles Dodgers (with two), have had multiple four-homer games in their history and share the distinction of having one four-homer game in each city they have called home (for the Braves, Boston, Milwaukee, and Atlanta; for the Dodgers, Brooklyn and Los Angeles). Five current franchises – the Braves,
Baltimore Orioles,
Chicago Cubs,
Cincinnati Reds, and
Oakland Athletics – share the record of having surrendered two four-homer games over their histories. Thirteen of the 30 franchises (as of 2021) have achieved at least one four-homer game, and 12 franchises have surrendered at least one. Eleven have never been involved in a four-homer game at all, although only three of these (
Boston Red Sox,
Detroit Tigers,
Minnesota Twins) date back to before the 1960s expansion era.
Despite Delahanty's achievement on July 13, 1896, the Phillies lost to the
Chicago Colts, one of only two occasions when a player hit four home runs but was on the losing team.[5] The other such occasion took place in 1986, when
Bob Horner had four home runs for the Braves, but the
Montreal Expos emerged victorious.[5] Following Delahanty's four-home run game in 1896, no other player would accomplish the feat for nearly 36 years, the longest gap between such occurrences.[5] The shortest interval took place in 2002,[5] when
Mike Cameron hit his four on May 2, 2002,[6] and
Shawn Green repeated the feat 21 days later, on May 23.[7] This was the first time two players had achieved a four-homer game in the same season; this would occur again in 2017 when
Scooter Gennett and J. D. Martinez achieved the feat in June and September respectively.[8][5] When Martinez struck his four home runs for the
Arizona Diamondbacks against the
Los Angeles Dodgers, he became the first player with a four-homer game to hit more homers than his opponents gained base hits.[9]
These games have resulted in other MLB single-game records due to the extreme offensive performance.
Mark Whiten tied
Jim Bottomley for the most
runs batted in in a single game with 12 in his four-homer game.[10] Shawn Green hit a
double and a
single along with his four home runs for 19
total bases, an MLB record. It surpassed
Joe Adcock's mark of 18, which also came from a four-homer game.[11][12]Carlos Delgado is the only player to make four
plate appearances in a game and hit a home run each time.[13]Warren Spahn pitched the ball which
Gil Hodges hit for the first of his four, the only
Hall of Famepitcher faced during a four-home-run game.[1] Of the 14 players eligible for the Hall of Fame who have hit four home runs in a game, six
have been elected. Players are eligible for the Hall of Fame if they have played in at least 10 major league seasons and have been either retired for five seasons or deceased for at least six months.[14] These requirements leave three players ineligible who are living and have played in the past five seasons and one (Seerey) who did not play 10 seasons in MLB.
Players
Shawn Green (left) was one of two players to hit four home runs in a game in May 2002. Green also hit a double and a single in the game for 19
total bases, an MLB record.
J. D. Martinez (right) is the most recent MLB player to hit four home runs in a game.
Player
Name
Date
Date of the game
Team
The player's team at the time
Opposing team
The team against whom the player hit four home runs
Score
Final score of the game, with the player's team's score listed first
^Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) (2007). The SABR Baseball List and Record Book: Baseball's Most Fascinating Records and Unusual Statistics. Scribner. p. 69.
ISBN9781416532453.
^Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) (2007). The SABR Baseball List and Record Book: Baseball's Most Fascinating Records and Unusual Statistics. Scribner. p. 70.
ISBN9781416532453.
^Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) (2007). The SABR Baseball List and Record Book: Baseball's Most Fascinating Records and Unusual Statistics. Scribner. p. 65.
ISBN9781416532453.