50 home run club

Source From Wikipedia English.

In Major League Baseball (MLB), the 50 home run club is the group of batters who have hit 50 or more home runs in a single season. Babe Ruth was the first to achieve this, doing so in 1920. By reaching the milestone, he also became the first player to hit 30 and then 40 home runs in a single season, breaking his own record of 29 from the 1919 season. Ruth subsequently became the first player to reach the 50 home run club on four occasions, repeating the achievement in 1921, 1927, and 1928. He remained the only player to accomplish this until Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa matched his feat in 1999 and 2001, respectively. In doing so, they became the only players to have achieved 50 home runs in four consecutive seasons. Barry Bonds hit the most home runs to join the club, collecting 73 in 2001. The most recent player to reach the milestone is Matt Olson, achieving the feat during the 2023 season.

A man wearing a red shirt and St. Louis Cardinals cap holds a baseball in each hand.
A man wearing a blue hat and gray baseball uniform bearing the number 21 prepares to throw a baseball.
Mark McGwire (left) and Sammy Sosa (right) are the only players to have hit 50 home runs in four consecutive seasons.

In total, 31 players have reached the 50 home run club in MLB history and ten have done so more than once. Of these, eighteen were right-handed batters, thirteen were left-handed, and one was a switch hitter, meaning he could bat from either side of the plate. Four of these players (including two active members of the 50 home run club) have played for only one major league team. The New York Yankees are the only franchise to have five players reach the milestone while on their roster: Ruth, Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris, Alex Rodriguez, and Aaron Judge. Ten players are also members of the 500 home run club and two of them (Willie Mays and Rodriguez) are also members of the 3,000 hit club. Ten players won the Most Valuable Player (MVP) Award in the same year as their 50 home run season. Mantle is the only player to have earned the Major League Triple Crown alongside achieving 50 home runs, leading both leagues in batting average, home runs and runs batted in (RBI). Mantle and Maris—collectively known as the M&M Boys—are the only teammates to reach the 50 home run club in the same season, hitting a combined 115 home runs in 1961 and breaking the single-season record for home runs by a pair of teammates. Albert Belle is the only player to amass 50 or more doubles in addition to attaining 50 home runs. Prince Fielder, at 23 years and 139 days, was the youngest player to reach the milestone while Bonds, at age 37, was the oldest. Pete Alonso and Aaron Judge are the only players to hit 50 home runs in their rookie seasons.

Due to the infrequent addition of members into the 50 home run club, Baseball Digest called it "a restrictive fraternity comprising slugging elite" in 1954, when there were only six members. Of the seventeen members eligible for the Baseball Hall of Fame, eight have been elected and three were elected on the first ballot. Eligibility requires that a player has "been retired five seasons" or deceased for at least six months, disqualifying four active players and two players who have been retired for less than five seasons. Some believe the milestone has become less important with the large number of new members; fifteen players joined the club on a total of 24 occasions from 1995 to 2010. Additionally, several of these recent members have had ties to performance-enhancing drugs.

Members

 
Babe Ruth was the first member of the 50 home run club and joined it in four seasons, a record he shares with Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa.
 
Jimmie Foxx achieved the 50 home run club and won the MVP Award in 1932, 1933 and 1938.
 
Mickey Mantle (right) earned the Triple Crown in addition to achieving the 50 home run club in 1956. Five years later, he and Roger Maris (left) became the only teammates to reach the 50 home run club in the same season.
Key
Year The year the player's 50 home run season occurred
Player (X) Name of the player and number of 50 home run seasons they had accomplished at that point
Team The player's team for his 50 home run season
HR Number of home runs in that season
Career The number of home runs the player hit in his MLB career
^ Denotes single-season home run record progression
Elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame
Player is active
Members of the 50 home run club
Year Player Team HR Career Ref
 
1920 Babe Ruth New York Yankees 54^ 714
1921 Babe Ruth (2) New York Yankees 59^ 714
1927 Babe Ruth (3) New York Yankees 60^ 714
1928 Babe Ruth (4) New York Yankees 54 714
1930 Hack Wilson Chicago Cubs 56 244
1932 Jimmie Foxx Philadelphia Athletics 58 534
1938 Jimmie Foxx (2) Boston Red Sox 50 534
1938 Hank Greenberg Detroit Tigers 58 331
1947 Johnny Mize New York Giants 51 359
1947 Ralph Kiner Pittsburgh Pirates 51 369
1949 Ralph Kiner (2) Pittsburgh Pirates 54 369
1955 Willie Mays New York Giants 51 660
1956 Mickey Mantle New York Yankees 52 536
1961 Mickey Mantle (2) New York Yankees 54 536
1961 Roger Maris New York Yankees 61^ 275
1965 Willie Mays (2) San Francisco Giants 52 660
1977 George Foster Cincinnati Reds 52 348
1990 Cecil Fielder Detroit Tigers 51 319
1995 Albert Belle Cleveland Indians 50 381
1996 Brady Anderson Baltimore Orioles 50 210
1996 Mark McGwire Oakland Athletics 52 583
1997 Ken Griffey Jr. Seattle Mariners 56 630
1997 Mark McGwire (2) Oakland Athletics
St. Louis Cardinals
58 583
1998 Greg Vaughn San Diego Padres 50 355
1998 Ken Griffey Jr. (2) Seattle Mariners 56 630
1998 Sammy Sosa Chicago Cubs 66 609
1998 Mark McGwire (3) St. Louis Cardinals 70^ 583
1999 Sammy Sosa (2) Chicago Cubs 63 609
1999 Mark McGwire (4) St. Louis Cardinals 65 583
2000 Sammy Sosa (3) Chicago Cubs 50 609
2001 Alex Rodriguez Texas Rangers 52 696
2001 Luis Gonzalez Arizona Diamondbacks 57 354
2001 Sammy Sosa (4) Chicago Cubs 64 609
2001 Barry Bonds San Francisco Giants 73^ 762
2002 Jim Thome Cleveland Indians 52 612
2002 Alex Rodriguez (2) Texas Rangers 57 696
2005 Andruw Jones Atlanta Braves 51 434
2006 Ryan Howard Philadelphia Phillies 58 382
2006 David Ortiz Boston Red Sox 54 541
2007 Alex Rodriguez (3) New York Yankees 54 696
2007 Prince Fielder Milwaukee Brewers 50 319
2010 José Bautista Toronto Blue Jays 54 344
2013 Chris Davis Baltimore Orioles 53 295 ,
2017 Giancarlo Stanton Miami Marlins 59 402
2017 Aaron Judge New York Yankees 52 257
2019 Pete Alonso New York Mets 53 192
2022 Aaron Judge (2) New York Yankees 62 257
2023 Matt Olson Atlanta Braves 54 230

See also

Notes

References

General

  • "Single-Season Leaders & Records for Home Runs". Baseball-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved July 4, 2012.

Specific