List of Major League Baseball individual streaks

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable individual player streaks achieved in Major League Baseball.

Hitting[]

Consecutive game records[]

Consecutive games with a hit

  • 56Joe DiMaggio, New York Yankees – May 15 through July 16, 1941

Consecutive games with a home run

  • 8 (3 tied)
    • Dale Long, Pittsburgh Pirates – May 19 through May 28, 1956
    • Don Mattingly, New York Yankees – July 8 through July 18, 1987
    • Ken Griffey, Jr., Seattle Mariners – July 20 through July 28, 1993

Consecutive games reaching base

  • 84Ted Williams, Boston Red Sox – July 1 through September 27, 1949

Consecutive games without a strikeout

  • 115Joe Sewell, Cleveland Indians – May 17 through September 19, 1929

Consecutive games with a strikeout

  • 37Aaron Judge, New York Yankees – July 8 through August 21, 2017

Consecutive games with two or more hits

  • 15Count Campau, St. Louis Browns – July 5 through July 23, 1890

Consecutive games with three or more hits

  • 6 (3 tied)
    • Sam Thompson, Philadelphia Phillies – June 11 through 21, 1895
    • Jimmy Johnston, Brooklyn Dodgers – June 24 through June 30, 1923
    • George Brett, Kansas City Royals – May 8 through 13, 1976

Consecutive games with an RBI

  • 17Ray Grimes, Chicago Cubs – June 27 through July 23, 1922

Consecutive games scoring one or more runs

Consecutive games with a walk

  • 22Roy Cullenbine, Detroit Tigers – July 2 through July 22, 1947

Consecutive games with a double

  • 9Bo Bichette, Toronto Blue Jays – July 31 through August 8, 2019

Consecutive games with a triple

  • 5 (2 tied)
    • Harry Davis, Pittsburgh Pirates – July 29 through August 3, 1897
    • Chief Wilson, Pittsburgh Pirates – June 17 through 20, 1912

Consecutive pinch-hit appearances with a home run

Consecutive plate appearance records[]

Consecutive plate appearances reaching base (unofficial) (includes all possible ways of reaching base: base hit, walk, hit-by-pitch, error, fielder's choice, dropped third strike, catcher's interference and fielder's obstruction)

  • 17Earl Averill, Jr., Los Angeles Angels – June 3 through June 10 (first game), 1962 (7 hits, 8 walks, 1 error, 1 fielder's choice)

Consecutive plate appearances reaching base (official) (includes all possible ways of reaching base which raise a batter's OBP: base hit, walk, hit-by-pitch)

  • 17Piggy Ward, Baltimore Orioles/Cincinnati Reds – June 16 through June 19, 1893 (8 hits, 8 walks, 1 hit-by-pitch)

Consecutive plate appearances with a hit

  • 12 (2 tied)

Consecutive plate appearances with a walk

  • 7 (5 tied)
    • Billy Rogell, Detroit Tigers – August 17 through 19, 1938
    • Mel Ott, New York Giants – June 16 through 18, 1943
    • Eddie Stanky, New York Giants – August 29 and 30, 1950
    • José Canseco, Oakland Athletics – August 4 and 5, 1992
    • Barry Bonds, San Francisco Giants – September 24 through 26, 2004

Consecutive season records[]

Consecutive seasons hitting .300 or better (50 or more games)

  • 23Ty Cobb, Detroit Tigers – 1906–1928

Consecutive seasons, 100 or more RBI

  • 13 (3 tied)
    • Lou Gehrig, New York Yankees – 1926–1938
    • Jimmie Foxx, Philadelphia A's and Boston Red Sox – 1929–1941
    • Alex Rodriguez, Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers and New York Yankees – 1998–2010

Consecutive seasons with 200 or more hits

  • 10Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle Mariners – 2001–2010

Consecutive seasons with 150 or more hits

  • 17 (2 tied)
    • Hank Aaron, Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves – 1955–1971
    • Derek Jeter, New York Yankees – 1996–2012

Consecutive seasons with 100 or more runs scored

  • 13 (3 tied)
    • Lou Gehrig, New York Yankees – 1926–1938
    • Hank Aaron, Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves – 1955–1967
    • Alex Rodriguez, Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers and New York Yankees – 1996–2008

Consecutive seasons with 50 or more home runs

  • 4 - Mark McGwire, Oakland Athletics and St. Louis Cardinals - 1996–1999
  • 4 - Sammy Sosa, Chicago Cubs - 1998–2001

Consecutive seasons with 40 or more home runs

  • 7Babe Ruth, New York Yankees – 1926–1932

Consecutive seasons with 30 or more home runs

  • 13 (2 tied)
    • Barry Bonds, Pittsburgh Pirates and San Francisco Giants – 1992–2004
    • Alex Rodriguez, Seattle Mariners, Texas Rangers and New York Yankees – 1998–2010

Consecutive seasons with 40 or more doubles

Consecutive seasons with 20 or more triples

Consecutive seasons with 100 or more walks

Consecutive seasons with 600 or more at-bats

  • 13Pete Rose, Cincinnati Reds and Philadelphia Phillies – 1968–1980

Consecutive seasons, .400 on-base percentage or better

  • 17Ted Williams, Boston Red Sox – 1939–1958

Consecutive seasons, .600 slugging percentage or better (50 or more games)

  • 7Barry Bonds, San Francisco Giants – 1998–2004
  • 7Babe Ruth, New York Yankees – 1926–1932

Baserunning[]

Consecutive stolen bases without being caught stealing

  • 50Vince Coleman, St. Louis Cardinals – September 18, 1988 – July 26, 1989

Consecutive games with a stolen base

  • 12Bert Campaneris, Oakland Athletics – June 10, 1969 – June 21, 1969

Consecutive seasons, 100 or more stolen bases

  • 3Vince Coleman, St. Louis Cardinals – 1985–1987

Consecutive seasons, 50 or more stolen bases

  • 12Lou Brock, St. Louis Cardinals – 1965–1976

Consecutive seasons, 40 or more stolen bases

  • 14Rickey Henderson, Oakland Athletics, New York Yankees, and Toronto Blue Jays – 1980–1993

Pitching[]

Consecutive game records[]

Consecutive games won

  • 24Carl Hubbell, New York Giants – July 18, 1936 – May 27, 1937 (record set over two seasons)

Consecutive games won within a single season

  • 19 (3 tied)
    • Tim Keefe, New York Giants – June 23 – August 10, 1888
    • Rube Marquard, New York Giants – April 11 – July 3, 1912 (streak began on Opening Day)
    • Gerrit Cole, Houston Astros – May 27 – October 15, 2019

Consecutive complete games (since 1900)

  • 39Jack Taylor, St. Louis Cardinals – April 15 – October 6, 1904

Consecutive games without being relieved

  • 202 – Jack Taylor, Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals – June 20, 1901 – August 13, 1906 (187 starts, all complete games, and 15 relief appearances)

Consecutive shutouts

  • 6Don Drysdale, Los Angeles Dodgers – May 14 – June 4, 1968

Consecutive no-hit games

Consecutive quality starts (six or more innings and three or fewer earned runs) (since 1920)

  • 26Bob Gibson, St. Louis Cardinals – September 12, 1967 – July 30, 1968
  • 26 - Jacob deGrom, New York Mets - May 18, 2018 - April 3, 2019

Consecutive games with 10 or more strikeouts

  • 11Gerrit Cole, Houston Astros – August 7 – October 10, 2019

Consecutive saves converted

  • 84Éric Gagné, Los Angeles Dodgers – August 28, 2002 – July 5, 2004 (record set over three seasons)

Consecutive team games with a save

  • 6 (3 tied)
    • Éric Gagné, Los Angeles Dodgers – May 16–22, 2003
    • Rod Beck, Chicago Cubs – August 30 through September 5, 1998
    • Addison Reed, Chicago White Sox – August 16–22, 2013

Consecutive team games with a relief appearance

  • 13 (2 tied)

Consecutive relief appearances with one or more strikeouts

  • 49Aroldis Chapman, Cincinnati Reds – August 21, 2013 through August 13, 2014 (record set over two seasons)

Consecutive relief appearances to start a season with one or more strikeouts

  • 45Corey Knebel, Milwaukee Brewers – April 3, 2017 through July 15, 2017

Consecutive relief appearances without allowing an earned run

  • 43 - Zach Britton, Baltimore Orioles - May 1, 2016 through August 24, 2016

Consecutive innings records[]

Consecutive scoreless innings pitched

  • 59Orel Hershiser, Los Angeles Dodgers – August 30, 1988 through September 28, 1988. (does not include 8 scoreless innings pitched in Game 1 of the 1988 NLCS or 2/3 scoreless innings pitched on April 5, 1989 to open the next season)

Consecutive hitless innings pitched

  • 25.1Cy Young, Boston Americans – April 25 through May 11, 1904 (included one perfect game)[1][2]

Consecutive perfect innings pitched

  • 15.1Yusmeiro Petit, San Francisco Giants – July 22 through August 28, 2014 (as starting and relief pitcher over 8 games, 1st and 8th games as starting pitcher and 2nd through 7th games as a relief pitcher)
  • 15.0Mark Buehrle, Chicago White Sox – July 18–28, 2009 (as starting pitcher, included one perfect game)

Consecutive innings pitched with a strikeout

  • 73Gerrit Cole, Houston Astros – August 7 through October 10, 2019[3]

Consecutive innings pitched without allowing a walk

  • 84.1Bill Fischer, Kansas City Athletics – August 3 through September 30, 1962

Consecutive innings pitched without allowing a home run (modern era)

  • 269.1Greg Minton, San Francisco Giants – June 1, 1979 through May 1, 1982

Consecutive innings pitched without allowing a home run (dead-ball era)

  • 1001Ed Killian, Cleveland Indians and Detroit Tigers – September 19, 1903, through August 7, 1907

Consecutive batters faced with a strikeout

  • 10 (4 tied)
    • Tom Seaver, New York Mets – April 22, 1970 (as a starting pitcher)
    • Éric Gagné, Los Angeles Dodgers – May 17–21, 2003 (as a relief pitcher)
    • Aaron Nola, Philadelphia Phillies – June 25, 2021
    • Corbin Burnes, Milwaukee Brewers – August 11, 2021

Consecutive strikes thrown (since pitch-by-pitch record keeping was introduced in 1988; includes foul balls and balls-in-play)

Consecutive scoreless innings pitched to start a major league career

  • 39Brad Ziegler, Oakland Athletics – May 31 through August 14, 2008

Consecutive season records[]

Consecutive seasons, 30 or more wins

  • 6Tim Keefe, New York Metropolitans (American Association) and New York Giants 1883–1888

Consecutive seasons, 20 or more wins

  • 12Christy Mathewson, New York Giants – 1903–1914

Consecutive seasons, 10 or more wins

  • 20Greg Maddux, Chicago Cubs, Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Dodgers, and San Diego Padres – 1988–2007 (includes a streak of 17 seasons with 15 or more wins, also a record)

Consecutive seasons, 300 or more strikeouts

  • 5Randy Johnson, Seattle Mariners, Houston Astros, and Arizona Diamondbacks – 1998–2002

Consecutive seasons, 200 or more strikeouts

  • 9Tom Seaver, New York Mets – 1968–1976

Consecutive seasons winning Triple Crown (lowest ERA, most wins, and most strikeouts in league - starting pitchers only)

  • 2 - (4 tied)
    • - Grover Cleveland Alexander, Philadelphia Phillies (National League) - 1915–1916
    • - Lefty Grove, Philadelphia Athletics (American League) - 1930–1931 (led both leagues in both seasons)
    • - Sandy Koufax, Los Angeles Dodgers (National League) - 1965–1966 (led both leagues in both seasons)
    • - Roger Clemens, Toronto Blue Jays (American League) - 1997–1998

Consecutive Opening Day starts

  • 14Jack Morris, Detroit Tigers, Minnesota Twins, and Toronto Blue Jays – 1980–1993

Consecutive seasons, 50 or more saves

Consecutive seasons, 40 or more saves

  • 4 – (3 tied)[5]
    • Trevor Hoffman (twice), San Diego Padres – 1998–2001 and 2004–2007
    • Francisco Rodríguez, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim – 2005–2008
    • Craig Kimbrel, Atlanta Braves – 2011–2014

Consecutive seasons, 30 or more saves

  • 9Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees – 2003–2011[6]

Fielding[]

The nature and demands of each position differ significantly, thus the records are separated by position. The streaks listed below are only relative to a player's fielding chances while playing the listed position. Errors made at other positions would not disrupt the streak listed.

Consecutive fielding chances at each position without an error

  • First base – 2,379Casey Kotchman, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim / Atlanta Braves / Boston Red Sox / Seattle Mariners – June 20, 2008, through August 21, 2010[7]
  • Second base – 911Plácido Polanco, Detroit Tigers / Philadelphia Phillies – July 1, 2006, through April 7, 2008[8]
  • Shortstop – 544Mike Bordick, Baltimore Orioles / Toronto Blue Jays – April 10, 2002, through April 2, 2003
  • Third base – 272Vinny Castilla, Colorado Rockies / Washington Nationals – July 4, 2004, through April 22, 2005
  • Outfield – 938Darren Lewis, Oakland Athletics / San Francisco Giants – August 21 – October 3, 1990 / July 13, 1991, through June 29, 1994
  • Catcher – 1,565Mike Matheny, St. Louis Cardinals – August 1, 2002, through August 4, 2004 (does not include passed balls)
  • Pitcher – 273Claude Passeau, Chicago Cubs – September 21, 1941, through May 20, 1946

Source for figures through 2007: The Elias Book of Baseball Records, 2008.

Games played[]

Consecutive games played

  • 2,632Cal Ripken, Jr., Baltimore Orioles – May 30, 1982 through September 19, 1998

Consecutive innings played (non-pitcher)

  • 8,243 – Cal Ripken, Jr., Baltimore Orioles – June 5, 1982 through September 14, 1987 (record set over 903 games)

Consecutive seasons played

  • 27Cap Anson, Rockford Forest Citys, Philadelphia Athletics, Chicago White Stockings, and Chicago Colts – 1871–1897 (1871–1875 seasons were played in the National Association, a professional league which preceded Major League Baseball).
  • 26Nolan Ryan, New York Mets, California Angels, Houston Astros, and Texas Rangers – 1968–1993 (all seasons played in Major League Baseball)

Consecutive seasons played with one team

  • 23 (2 tied)
    • Brooks Robinson, Baltimore Orioles – 1955–1977
    • Carl Yastrzemski, Boston Red Sox – 1961–1983

Consecutive seasons played with different or multiple teams (includes off-season and mid-season changes)

  • 12Terry Mulholland, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Yankees, San Francisco Giants, Seattle Mariners, Chicago Cubs, Atlanta Braves, Pittsburgh Pirates, Los Angeles Dodgers, Cleveland Indians, and Minnesota Twins – 1993–2004

Consecutive seasons with a playoff appearance

  • 13Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees – 1995–2007

Awards[]

Consecutive MVP Awards

  • 4Barry Bonds, San Francisco Giants – 2001–2004

Consecutive Cy Young Awards

  • 4 (2 tied)
    • Greg Maddux, Chicago Cubs and Atlanta Braves – 1992–1995
    • Randy Johnson, Arizona Diamondbacks – 1999–2002

Consecutive Gold Glove Awards

  • 16 (2 tied)
    • Brooks Robinson, Baltimore Orioles – 1960–1975
    • Jim Kaat, Minnesota Twins, Chicago White Sox, and Philadelphia Phillies – 1962–1977

Consecutive Silver Slugger Awards (award first attributed in 1980)

  • 10Mike Piazza, Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets – 1993–2002

Consecutive Hank Aaron Awards (award first attributed in 1999; fan voting first included in 2003)

  • 3Alex Rodriguez, Texas Rangers – 2001–2003

Consecutive Edgar Martínez Awards (award first attributed in 1973, originally called the Outstanding Designated Hitter Award)

  • 5David Ortiz, Boston Red Sox – 2003–2007

Consecutive Rolaids Relief Man of the Year Awards (award first attributed in 1976, discontinued after 2012)

  • 4Dan Quisenberry, Kansas City Royals – 1982–1985

Consecutive MLB Player of the Month Awards (award first attributed in 1958)

  • 3Mark McGwire, St. Louis Cardinals – September, 1997 through May, 1998

Consecutive MLB Pitcher of the Month Awards (award first attributed in 1975)

  • 3 (3 tied)
    • Pedro Martínez, Boston Red Sox – April–June, 1999
    • Johan Santana, Minnesota Twins – July–September, 2004
    • Jake Arrieta, Chicago Cubs - August, 2015 through April, 2016

Consecutive MLB Rookie of the Month Awards (award first attributed in 2001)

  • 4Mike Trout, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim – May–August, 2012

Consecutive All-Star Game appearances

  • 25Hank Aaron, Milwaukee / Atlanta Braves, Milwaukee Brewers – 1955–1975 (two games were played from 1959–1962)

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Clarifying Some of the Records*". Society for American Baseball Research. Archived from the original on August 4, 2011.
  2. ^ Peticca, Mike (July 27, 2011). "No-hitters: Did you ever attend a record-book type major league game? Tell us your memories". The Plain Dealer. Archived from the original on August 4, 2011.
  3. ^ "Gerrit Cole Had an Insane Strikeout Streak End Tonight". 11 October 2019.
  4. ^ "Oakland Athletics at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim Box Score, April 18, 2012".
  5. ^ Simon, Mark (January 11, 2011). "Does HOF await Trevor Hoffman?". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 3, 2011. Only three pitchers have had streaks of four straight seasons with at least 40 saves. Hoffman did it not once, but twice.
  6. ^ Carig, Marc (August 14, 2011). "The Yankees This Week: Mariano Rivera drawing skepticism". The Star-Ledger. Archived from the original on August 17, 2011.
  7. ^ "M's Kotchman sets mark for errorless chances". cnnsi.com. Retrieved 2010-06-03.[dead link]
  8. ^ "Polanco's errorless streak ends". redsox.com. Retrieved 2008-04-08.

External links[]

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