- Source: List of Major League Baseball hit records
This is a list of Major League Baseball hit records.
Bolded names mean the player is still active and playing.
3,000 career hits
240+ hits in one season
= Evolution of the single season record for hits
== Three or more seasons with 215+ hits
== Five or more seasons with 200+ hits
== 100 or more hits from each side of the plate, season
=League leader in hits
= League leader in hits 5 or more seasons
== League leader in hits 3 or more consecutive seasons
== League leader in hits, three decades
== League leader in hits, both leagues
== League leader in hits, three different teams
=Consecutive game hitting streaks of 30 or more games
Where possible, hitting streaks that extend between seasons are broken down to show when the hits occurred. For example, Keeler's (1, 44) indicates 1 hit in 1896, and 44 in 1897.
This list omits Denny Lyons of the 1887 American Association Philadelphia Athletics, who had a 52-game hitting streak. In 1887, the major leagues adopted a new rule which counted walks as hits, a rule which was dropped after that season. Lyons hit in 52 consecutive games that season, but his streak included two games (#22 and #44) in which his only "hits" were walks. In 1968, MLB ruled that walks in 1887 would not be counted as hits, so Lyons' streak was no longer recognized, though it still appears on some lists. In 2000, Major League Baseball reversed its 1968 decision, ruling that the statistics which were recognized in each year's official records should stand, even in cases where they were later proven incorrect. Paradoxically, the ruling affects only hit totals for the year; the batting champion for the year is not recognized as the all-time leader despite having the highest single-season average under the ruling, and Lyons' hitting streak is not recognized.
Consecutive game hitting streaks to start a career
7 or more hits by an individual in one game
6 hits in a game by an individual, twice
Excluded on this list are Henry Larkin, who accomplished this with the Washington Senators in the American Association, and Ed Delahanty, with the Philadelphia Phillies in the Players' League.
3 hits by an individual in one inning
Tom Burns (September 6, 1883)
Fred Pfeffer (September 6, 1883)
Ned Williamson (September 6, 1883)
Gene Stephens (June 18, 1953)
Johnny Damon (June 27, 2003)
1,660 hits by a team in one season
See also
List of Major League Baseball progressive career hits leaders
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- New York Yankees
- Exo
- Demi Lovato
- Cool for the Summer
- Detroit
- Daftar julukan kota di Amerika Serikat
- Daftar episode Alvin and the Chipmunks
- List of Major League Baseball hit records
- List of Major League Baseball no-hitters
- List of Major League Baseball records
- List of Major League Baseball home run records
- List of Major League Baseball career hits leaders
- List of Major League Baseball career home run leaders
- Hit (baseball)
- 3,000-hit club
- List of Major League Baseball records considered unbreakable
- List of Major League Baseball progressive career hits leaders