MLB's most mind-blowing hitting, pitching feats of the year — plus the 5 most ridiculous games

There was a game in El Paso where even a two-touchdown lead wasnt safe.
...
There was a game in Houston where a pitcher allowed four base runners on three pitches.
...
And then there was that game in Los Angeles where Mookie Betts hit for the Strangest But Truest cycle of his career.
(Spoiler alert: There were no hits involved.) So if all that could happen, on a baseball diamond near you, how could we not round it up for Part 2 of our Strange But True Feats of the Year extravaganza ? Youre welcome! My 10 favorite Strange But True Hitting Feats of the Year Kwan Youre Hot, Youre Hot Youll never guess how Guardians hit machine Steven Kwan had his 14-game hitting streak end in June.
How bout ...
on a hit ! Well, it should have been a hit.
The runner on first, Austin Hedges , held up for so long, to see if the ball got through, he managed to get forced out at second, on a line-drive rocket to center field.
There went Kwans pursuit of Joe DiMaggio! Hes a pop star No Dodgers actually hit for the cycle this year, but Mookie Betts did pop up for the cycle.
Heres how his four at-bats went on Sept.
25: Popup to the second baseman ...
popup to the third baseman ...
popup to the first baseman ...
and (yep) popup to the shortstop.
And how many other Dodgers popped up to any base that day? Right you are.
That would be none.
Advertisement Why Oh Wyatt But you know who did hit for the cycle in 2024? Rangers rookie Wyatt Langford .
And Wyatt would we mention that? Because, in his first season in the big leagues, Langford had ...
a cycle ...
and an inside-the-park homer ...
and a walk-off grand slam.
Just to put that in a little perspective ...
heres one guy who has never done any of those things: A fellow named Aaron Judge ! All rise ...
and head for first base Then again, Aaron Judge also did some stuff this year that nobody has ever done.
And since this is the Strange But True Feats of the Year column, were not talking about all those baseballs he whomped into the bleachers.
Were talking about stuff like this.
After hitting his 41st HR of the season in the 1st inning, Aaron Judge gets the intentional walk in the 2nd with two out and nobody on.
pic.twitter.com/YvPzQ8MXH6 MLB (@MLB) August 3, 2024 That was the sight of Judge getting intentionally walked by the Blue Jays on Aug.
3 ...
with nobody on base ...
in the second inning.
So does that mean Judge was getting The Barry Bonds Treatment? Id vote no! Career plate appearances by Bonds, first or second inning, no one on: 1,690 Career intentional walks in those situations: Zero! (Source: Baseball Reference / Stathead) Arraez-a-roni I count 43 active players who have struck out five times in one game.
Then theres Luis Arraez .
He also struck out five times this past season in the entire second half.
Easy as .1223 It may go down as the Year of the Jackson.
But with apologies to Jackson Merrill, Chourio and Holliday, the most historic Jackson of them all might have been sweet-swinging Rays catcher Alex Jackson .
He batted a pitcher-esque .122 this year (or .1223 if youre into decimal points), with 53 strikeouts and 17 hits.
So whats so historically Strange But True about that? Advertisement Oh, only that its the worst batting average in the modern era, among position players who got at least 150 plate appearances in a season.
And not only that.
Just four hitters in the last 50 years have even come within 15 points of that .1223 average.
And one of them was a guy named ...
Alex Jackson! (He hit .137 in 2021.) Leading man I know this sounds like a riddle, but stay with me here.
Victor Robles led off for the Mariners in their July 26 game against the White Sox .
Drew Thorpe was the White Soxs starting pitcher.
And in the first inning, Robles hit a home run off Thorpe.
But ...
it was not a leadoff homer.
So what happened? Baseball happened! Robles led off that game by grounding out.
But it was all downhill from there for Drew Thorpe.
He then gave up eight runs in that first inning and finished with (yikes) back-to-back-to-back homers.
And who hit the third home run in a row? Mariners leadoff man Victor Robles.
Who else! Dont Walk This Way Ever heard of a hitter making an out on his own intentional walk? I never had, either until the Marlins Jesus Sanchez did that in an Aug.
25 game against the Cubs .
He was due up with runners on second and third in a one-run game.
So when the Cubs put up four fingers, he started ambling toward first base, but then U-turned back to the dugout when Cristian Pache headed for first to pinch run for him.
Oops! Since Sanchez never made it to first base, the Cubs appealed.
He was out, but thats not all.
His walk didnt even count because according to the proper authorities, hed refused to go to first base.
And it wound up being scored as a 2-unassisted fly ball to the catcher to end an at-bat in which a pitch was never thrown, to a hitter the other team was actually trying to walk.
I think this sums up why we could only have a Strange But True Feats of the Year column in ...
Baseball! Advertisement How incredible (but true) was the rookie season of the Padres sensational Jackson Merrill ? I think this might sum it up.
As you might have heard someplace, he had five games this year in which he hit a game-tying or go-ahead home run in the ninth inning or later four of them in a span of four weeks in July and August.
Does that seem good? Heres how good: We now have two active $700 million players whose names might sound familiar: Juan Soto and Shohei Ohtani .
Theyve combined to hit 446 career regular-season home runs.
Want to guess how many of those homers theyve hit that tied games or put their team ahead in the ninth or later? Yessirree.
Five apiece.
And while were on the subject of that Ohtani guy, have I mentioned lately that he got five extra-base hits in one game in Miami? Well, I just mentioned it again, because ...
well, Tim Anderson.
Those same South Floridians who got to watch The Ohtani Game also spent two months this season watching Tim Anderson who somehow went two months, and 38 games in a row, without getting any extra-base hits.
That seems hard! Speaking (one more time) about Ohtani ...
theres this crazy note.
Ohtani stole 59 bases this season.
His teammate, Freddie Freeman , was hurting so much by October, he needed ankle surgery after the season.
So what were the odds of this: SB by Ohtani in the 2024 postseason 0 SB by Freddie Freeman in the 2024 postseason 1 Also, what were the odds of this: Those Strange But True Phillies hitters had three nine-inning games in 2024 in which they struck out 17 times.
Their record in those games was ...
3-and-0! Meanwhile, all the other teams out there had 10 games this year when they struck out 17 times (or more).
So how many times did all those teams win a game like that? That would be exactly one! Advertisement You know who did not throw away his shot in 2024? Jose (Cousin of Lin-Manuel) Miranda of the Twins .
He made sure the world would know his name by getting a hit in 12 straight at-bats in July.
Yes, 12! Tony Gwynn never got a hit in 12 straight at-bats.
Ted Williams never got a hit in 12 straight at-bats.
George Brett never got a hit in 12 straight at-bats.
But Jose Miranda did.
Would you believe that the year before, Miranda got a total of four hits in the big leagues after April? Yep.
He went 4-for-35.
And then, in 2024, that same guy went 12-for-12.
Because of course he did! The Brewers alerted the Strange But True authorities by hitting six grand slams in two weeks.
The Red Sox , on the other hand, alerted the Strange But True authorities by forgetting to hit any grand slams all season (although they did give up nine of them).
Hey, did somebody say grand slams? Are you familiar with the Lehigh Valley IronPigs, the Triple-A affiliate of the Phillies? Heres how the IronPigs won their first game of the season: On a walk-off grand slam.
Want to guess how they won their last game of the season? On a walk-off grand slam.
Because baseball symmetry is awesome.
And the grand-slam tidbits dont end there, because there are all those other slams hit across baseball this year.
Then theres Parker Meadows of those remarkable Detroit Tigers .
He came to the plate with two outs in the ninth, Sept.
5 in San Diego.
The Tigers were one out from getting shut out.
They trailed by three.
The count went full.
Then this happened.
Parker Meadows hits a go-ahead grand slam with the @Tigers down to their last strike! pic.twitter.com/XdGZXdok42 MLB (@MLB) September 6, 2024 According to our friends from STATS Perform, two players in history have hit that slam one out away from being shut out, three runs down on the road.
One was Parker Meadows.
The other? Some guy named Ted Williams.
And finally, we could devote an entire Strange But True column to Reds freak of nature Elly De La Cruz .
But lets just mention he did all of this (plus lots more): Stole second on a throw back to the pitcher! Advertisement Scored from third on a routine one-hopper back to the pitcher! Got four extra-base hits in one game on his way to leading the major leagues in stolen bases.
(The last MLB stolen-base champ to do that: Willie Mays ...
in 1958!) And ran four 3-and-0 counts in one game.
You know who never did that ? Famous Reds count-worker Joey Votto never did that! Elly De La Cruz, man.
Hes breaking everything we ever thought we knew about ...
Baseball! My 10 favorite Strange But True Pitching Feats of the Year What a juxta-position Who would you rather send to the mound Luis Guillorme or your friendly neighborhood Cy Young Award winner? Dont answer too quickly now, if only because ...
This really happened in May and June: Sixteen consecutive position players took the mound in real big-league baseball games ...
and threw 16 shutout innings in a row! Meanwhile, the American Leagues Cy Young and ERA champ, Tarik Skubal , made it to the mound 31 times during his spectacular breakout season ...
and never threw more than 11 shutout innings in a row! All our Rowdy friends Or maybe you should just get Rowdy.
By which we can only mean everybodys favorite emergency closer, Rowdy Tellez.
Sept.
22, 2023: Against all odds, Rowdy takes the hill and gets the last three outs of a pennant-clincher (for the Brewers ).
Sept.
4, 2024: Rowdy takes the mound again (this time for the Pirates ) and gets the last three outs of a no-hitter (OK, not for his team).
So what if this was a game in which the Pirates got no-hit and lost, 17-0 against the Cubs.
Whatever.
Because ...
Rowdy Tellez (not an actual relief pitcher): Did both of those things! Mariano Rivera (greatest relief pitcher ever): Never did both of those things! The Nick of Time The good news for Bostons always-innovative Nick Pivetta: He had two games this year (May 30 and July 10) in which he struck out eight hitters in a row.
Advertisement The bad news for Pivetta: He lost both of those games! Losses by everyone else in history who has ever struck out that many hitters in a row in a game: Three! Losses by Pivetta just in 2024: Two! Saved by the Bello But in Pivettas defense, Im starting to think the Red Sox turned this stuff into practically an epidemic.
I draw that conclusion because of what happened on July 9, in the game before Pivetta whiffed eight in a row the second time.
In that game, his rotation mate, Brayan Bello , got 10 straight outs on strikeouts in a game against the As.
Which sounds pretty awesome, except ...
All the guys who didnt strike out against him that day went 9-for-13 (.692), with two walks! So was he A) unhittable? Or B) way too hittable? Correct answer: Yes! They said thered be no math You know why this column needs to exist every year? Because of stuff like this: On July 3, Blue Jays reliever Jose Cuas rolled into a tight game in Houston and did the most mathematically impossible thing any reliever could ever do.
He allowed four straight base runners ...
on three pitches.
Here we go: Intentional walk ...
single on the next pitch ...
hit batter on the next pitch ...
and then another HBP on the pitch after that.
As you know, we dont bother wasting actual pitches on those intentional walks anymore.
So yep, thats four batters reaching base on three pitches ...
which seems challenging, if only because ...
its never been done (not in the pitch-counting era, since 1988, anyway).
But wait.
Theres more, because the reliever who preceded Cuas to the mound, Zach Pop , allowed two more base runners on his last three pitches (but also got a line-drive out).
So thats six base runners ...
on six pitches ...
with an out mixed in there just for fun.
Hat tip to Robert Ford and Steve Sparks, of the entertaining (and mathematically savvy) Astros radio booth, for thinking I might be interested in this.
Advertisement But while were on the subject Can we also salute Phillies reliever Ricardo Pinto for his exercise in mathematical incorrectness? He strolled into an April 20 game against the White Sox ...
and issued a four-pitch walk to the first batter he faced ...
but one of those pitches was a strike.
Howd he do that? Repeat after me: pitch clock! Yep, he got hit with a clock violation (and ball one) before he threw any actual pitches.
When the clock strikes none Since were talking pitch clocks, congratulations (I guess) to Nationals closer Kyle Finnegan.
In a June 22 visit to Colorado, he didnt just make baseball history.
He made tick-tocking history by becoming the first pitcher to let a game end by forgetting to throw a pitch until after the pitch clock ticked to zero.
Want to see what the most innovative blown save in history looked like? Here you go.
Rockies-Nationals ended on a...
Pitch clock violation?? @TalkinBaseball_ pic.twitter.com/TMsGdMYvtT The Athletic MLB (@TheAthleticMLB) June 23, 2024 Finnegan arrived on the mound in the ninth with the Nationals leading, 7-6.
If he was looking for a way to make people forget that he started this outing by going single, single, single, single to the first four hitters, this did the trick! He then just hung onto the baseball until it turned into a game-ending clock-off and history was made.
Memo to Kyle: If your favorite thing about this sport used to be Baseball the game without a clock, its time to find a new favorite thing! I remember it all too Criswell You know what else seems hard to do? That thing that Red Sox reliever Cooper Criswell did in an Aug.
16 game in Baltimore.
So what did he do? He blew a save in a game he entered in the second inning.
How even? In another eminently 2024 development, Criswell inherited a 2-0 lead, in a game started by an opener ( Brennan Bernardino ).
He then gave up six runs in the next 3 1/3 innings.
And he got an official blown save out of it.
Baseball! Advertisement Its all about face time You can wash your face.
You can save face.
You can face the music.
Or you can do what Ben Heller and Hunter Brown did this year.
Just keep facing hitter after hitter after hitter.
Ben Hellers day (June 9): Faced 12 hitters in the 10th inning! Ever heard of a relief pitcher facing 12 hitters in an extra inning ( and hitting three of them) without getting taken out of the game? Heller pulled that off for the Pirates in this game against Minnesota, never getting yanked despite allowing nine base runners and seven runs! Hes the first reliever to make it through a 12-batter extra inning since Jack Baldschun ...
in 1966! Hunter Browns day (April 11): Faced 14 hitters in the first inning! It must be hard to face that many hitters in the first inning (especially without even getting three outs).
Im only guessing that because no starter in the modern era had ever done it before Browns mind-blowing 11-hit, nine-run evening for the Astros versus Kansas City .
Devin Williams gave up only 10 hits all season (to 88 hitters).
Brown gave up 11 in one inning! Batters Not Included Sean Newcomb won one game for the As this year (June 11 versus the Twins).
But thats not the reason he showed up in this column.
Its his line in the box score that day that got him into this column: Batters faced Newcomb 0.
Turns out he was way better off not throwing any pitches than he was when he did his regular job.
He won zero times in all those games he actually pitched to somebody.
In this game, all he did was head for the mound and pick Austin Martin off first base before facing anybody.
That was the last out of the eighth inning.
Then he vultured his only win on a Shea Langeliers homer a half-inning later.
Now that, friends, is the beauty of ...
Baseball! How Strange But True a season was this? Neither of the two reigning Cy Young Award winners ( Gerrit Cole and Blake Snell ) won a game before July 13! How Strange But True a season was this? The best closer on Earth, Cleveland s Emmanuel Clase , allowed only five earned runs and two homers all season.
Thats in 74 appearances and 270 batters faced.
...
Then, naturally, that same guy headed for the mound in the postseason ...
and allowed eight earned runs and three homers in a span of five appearances and 23 batters.
Crazy! Advertisement Astros reliever Kaleb Ort had an interesting day at the office on Sept.
18.
He faced three hitters that day in San Diego.
They went: homer ...
homer ...
homer.
How many home runs did he allow to the other 90 hitters he faced this year? Four! Orioles reliever Yohan Ramirezs first three pitches of an outing in April went well: hit batter, wild pitch, wild pitch.
But hey, he was unhittable! In back-to-back Twins games in June, Bailey Ober retired the last 17 hitters he faced, then Pablo Lopez went out the next day and retired the first 17 hitters he faced.
Gerrit Cole in a Sept.
20 start in Oakland: nine innings, two hits allowed, one win ...
but no complete game.
Wait.
Howd that happen? The Yankees won in the 10th so Cole became the first Yankee to go nine, win and still not collect a complete game since Ed Figueroa ...
on Sept.
17, 1976! The cool news for Cubs rookie Ben Brown was, he threw a secret no-hitter by getting 35 outs in a row between hits over two starts.
The not-so-cool news was, he didnt win either start! And heres the name of this game: A Spencer (Schwellenbach) gave up two home runs in the same game to a Spencer (Horwitz).
...
James McCann (not an actual pitcher) gave up a home run to Kyle McCann .
...
And in the Strangest But Truest game of 2024 as determined by how many times my phone buzzed in the middle of the night during a vacation in Europe Ranger Suarez became the first Ranger ever to beat yup the Rangers.
Some people come home from vacation and show all their photos to their friends.
Only I come home from vacation and spend an hour looking up how many pitchers have beaten a team with the same name.
Ill spare you the whole research project.
But the most shocking thing I learned was this: Somehow, Socks Seibold went a combined 0-5 in his career against the White Sox and Red Sox! That makes no sense, even in ...
Baseball! Advertisement My five favorite Strange But True Games of the Year* (*Regular-season division) You know how hard it was to keep this list to only five? I had to leave out a game where the Red Sox stole nine bases against the Yankees.
As recently as 2021, the Sox stole nine bases in the entire second half of the season .
I also had to leave out a game where the Tigers pinch hit for their No.
5 hitter three at-bats in a row ...
and all three of the pinch hitters got a hit.
Last time they did that, Sparky Anderson was their manager.
And I even had to leave out a game where the As had one player ( Lawrence Butler ) hit three home runs and another player ( JJ Bleday ) go 5-for-5 ...
and they still lost.
There were about a million more, naturally.
But these were my five favorites.
Feel free to drop yours in the comments section.
Sept.
30: Mets 8, Braves 7 Was this the greatest postseason-clinching game since the Bobby Thomson Game? If you tell me yes, I wont argue, because holy moly.
Technically, this was not a playoff game.
It just felt like one because it was a win-and-youre-in game for both teams.
It was also a makeup game in Atlanta the day after what was supposed to be the last day of the season.
So it was a wild one before it ever started.
Then all this happened: The Mets arrived in the eighth inning with three hits, no runs, a 3-0 canyon to climb out of and a 7 percent win probability.
Did that sound promising? They also had a 77-game losing streak when they trailed by at least three runs in the eighth or later.
So that was not ideal.
Naturally, they then scored six shocking runs in the top of the eighth to take a 6-3 lead.
But then, because this game needed to go further off the rails, they gave up four shocking runs in the bottom of the eighth to fall behind again, 7-6.
And then ...
aw, just cue up the video player for the epic Francisco Lindor homer that won this thing! HE DID IT!!!!!!!!! FRANCISCO LINDOR 2-RUN HOMER!!!!!!!!!!!!!! pic.twitter.com/gzHc1zxNuo SNY (@SNYtv) September 30, 2024 So was that Strange But True enough for you with these teams coughing up late-inning leads three half-innings in a row, with their postseason lives hanging on every pitch? Lets agree on yes if only because it made the Mets the first team to clinch a postseason spot with a late-inning game script like that since the 1903 Pirates.
And if you dont recall that Pirates game real vividly, it might be because they did that to clinch the first postseason spot ever .
Advertisement June 24: The Rickwood Game (Giants 5, Cubs 1) Who writes these scripts? How can it not be the baseball gods? How could it be possible that the late, great Willie Mays left this earth in the very same week in June that Major League Baseball returned to the first pro ballpark he ever played in Rickwood Field? But somehow, that happened.
And so did this ...
There were two home runs hit in that Rickwood Field game, the first National League or American League game ever played in the state of Alabama, Mays home state.
The first home run was hit by a man from Alabama , Brendan Donovan .
The second home run was hit by Heliot Ramos ...
the man playing center field for the Giants in what well always remember as The Willie Mays Game.
Baseball! Always amazing.
Heliot Ramos brings Rickwood to its feet #MLBatRickwood | @MLB pic.twitter.com/Zzhl20vS0C SFGiants (@SFGiants) June 21, 2024 April 16: Rays 7, Angels 6, in 13 ridiculous innings I dont know what your nomination is for the most whacked-out game of 2023.
But heres mine.
How the heck did the Rays ever win this game? With two outs in the ninth, they were two runs behind, had nobody on base and had gotten one hit all night.
But a Luis Rengifo error started a miracle two-run, game-tying rally.
And that wasnt even the Strange But True part.
The Rays then went on to win a game that they trailed in the ninth, 10th, 11th and 13th innings .
So whats so Strange But True about that? Ho-ho-ho.
Heres the complete list of teams since 1912 that have won a game they trailed in the ninth, 10th, 11th and any extra inning from the 13th on: The 2024 Rays.
And thatll do it for that complete list! (Hat tip for that tidbit: the great Katie Sharp of Baseball Reference.) April 28-30: Miami Mayhem trifecta! All right, so Im cheating slightly with this one.
Its not one game.
Its two and Im attaching an epilogue that actually makes it three! Advertisement Sorry.
Its my Strange But True column, so I get to bend these rules when its convenient.
Feel free to file suit if you know a lawyer who would take that case.
Anyway ...
The Marlins in that April 28 game (against the Nationals) : Scored six runs in the first inning ...
and lost! The Marlins two days later (against the Rockies ) : Gave up five runs in the first inning ...
and won! Whats Up with That? Does that seem hard? Its so hard, according to my friends at STATS Perform, that the Marlins became the first team to blow a first-inning lead that big and then make up a first-inning hole that huge, in a span of three games, in the modern era.
But also ...
Special bonus Whats Up with That? If you thought that was hard, think about how the Marlins won that April 30 game.
They trailed by five in the bottom of the ninth.
They trailed again (6-5) in extra innings.
And they still won .
How short is the list of teams in the modern era to win a game after doing that? So short that theyre the only team on it.
But dont touch that screen because ...
One more bonus Whats Up with That? There were five runs scored in the top of the first inning in that April 30 game.
There were five runs scored in the bottom of the ninth.
There were no runs scored in any of the 34 half-innings in between.
Ever seen a game like that before? No, you havent, because, according to STATS, that was the only game in the modern era where thats happened, too.
But wait a second because ...
Here comes that epilogue! Now lets spin the time machine ahead four months to Aug.
27, when the Marlins traveled to Colorado for the rematch.
Could this happen again? Why the heck not! In other words, two times this year, the Marlins trailed the Rockies by at least four runs in the ninth inning ...
and came back to win both games .
Not to suggest it had been a while since any team did that twice in one season against the same team.
But ...
The last time it happened was 98 years ago ...
when Babe Ruths 1926 Yankees pulled that off versus the Tigers.
And thatll be the last comp ever between any Babe Ruth Yankees team and the 2024 Marlins.
I promise.
Advertisement Sept.
11: Mets 6, Blue Jays 2 So was this The Francisco Lindor Game? Or was that game in Atlanta the Francisco Lindor Game? Does it even matter? It just tells us a lot about Lindors season and the Mets finish that we even have to debate that question.
So what was the Strange But True deal with this game? Take a deep breath.
Here goes.
Torontos Bowden Francis took a no-hitter into the ninth ...
for the second time in four starts! Torontos Bowden Francis lost a no-hitter in the ninth ...
for the second time in four starts! Last pitcher to lose two no-hitters like that in the same season: some guy named Nolan Ryan, in 1989.
But lets keep going.
That Francisco Lindor dude was the reason Francis lost this no-hitter, thanks to yet another OMG -That-Just-Happened home run.
Linsanity! FRANCISCO LINDOR BREAKS UP THE NO-HITTER WITH A HOME RUN pic.twitter.com/QAFKLBNUVY Talkin Baseball (@TalkinBaseball_) September 11, 2024 Except after that ...
there was more wackiness, because the Mets, a team desperately trying to keep their playoff hopes alive, went from being no-hit to putting up a six-run ninth! Friend of the column Eric Orns reports it was the most runs ever scored in the ninth inning by any team that had zero hits in all the other innings ...
because how could it not be! So ...
What.
A.
Game.
Except that, if youve read this far, you know it wasnt even the Mets most Strange But True win of the year, the month or even this portion of this column! June 9: El Paso Chihuahuas 17, Las Vegas Aviators 16 Finally, heres a line score you dont see every day.
Thats what the scoreboard looks like when a team blows a 15-1 lead .
And thats a thing that happened, in real life, to the Las Vegas Aviators of the Pacific Coast League, back in June.
They led, 15-1, in the fourth.
They still lost, 17-16, to those pesky El Paso Chihuahuas.
And even though that did not happen in a league known as the major leagues, is it Strange (but True) enough to make it into this column? Apparently! Advertisement How many big-league teams have ever done that? Ha-ha.
That answer would be ...
zero.
Of course! The most runs any big-league team has ever trailed by and won is 12 done once in the last 99 years, by Jim Thomes 2001 Indians, in a game the Mariners do not have fond memories of.
The Chihuahuas gave up a 10-run inning ...
and won! Yep, they served up a 10-spot to Vegas in the fourth inning ...
and won anyway.
So how many teams in AL/NL history have done that? According to STATS, that answer is six but three of those happened in 1912.
And no one since has done it as late as the fourth inning (or beyond).
But also ...
They had a nine-run inning after giving up a 10-run inning! One more indication that this game was bonkers: Three innings after allowing 10 runs in an inning, El Paso scored nine in the seventh inning.
Thats happened once in the big leagues ...
in the past 90 years! (The Rays and Orioles did it in 2006.) So it obviously isnt every year that the Strange But True Feats of the Year column has to head for El Paso to chronicle a game like that.
But its just our way of reminding you that you need this column to exist and we need this column to exist because in case you hadnt noticed, you never know what the heck might happen in ...
Baseball! The Year in Strange But True GO DEEPER MLB's Strange But True 2024: The team, game, inning and homer of the year plus The Ohtani Game.
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