Four-Home Run Games
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Four-Home Run Games
J.D. Martinez, Arizona Diamondbacks
Martinez hit home runs off four different Dodgers pitchers and hit a longball in each of the last three innings as part of a 4-for-5 day with six RBIs in Arizona's 13-0 win.
Scooter Gennett — June 6, 2017
Gennett's 5-for-5 night didn't begin with a power surge. His first at-bat ended in an RBI single, but he followed that with four dingers, including a grand slam. Gennett finished with 10 RBIs and 17 total bases.
Josh Hamilton — May 9, 2012
Hamilton went 5-for-5 with four home runs and a double, recording a career-high eight RBI and an American League record 18 total bases in the Texas Rangers' 10-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles.
Carlos Delgado — Sept. 25, 2003
Delgado is the only man to hit a home run in his only four plate appearances in a game, doing so in the Toronto Blue Jays' 10-8 win over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. Some call it the only perfect hitting game in MLB history.
Shawn Green — May 23, 2002
Green went 6-for-6 with an MLB record 19 total bases in the Los Angeles Dodgers' 16-3 rout of the Milwaukee Brewers.
Mike Cameron — May 2, 2002
Cameron went 4-for-5 with a hit by pitch and made extra history in a 10-run Seattle Mariners first inning against the Chicago White Sox. He and Bret Boone became the first teammates to each hit two home runs in the same inning. Seattle won the game 15-4.
Mark Whiten — Sept. 7, 1993
Whiten's performance came in game two of a doubleheader, a 15-2 Cardinals win over the Cincinnati Reds. But Whiten was a big reason why St. Louis lost the opener, misplaying a Reggie Sanders ninth-inning line drive in a 14-13 game. Whiten matched Jim Bottomley for the most RBI in one game — 12.
Bob Horner — July 6, 1986
The Atlanta Braves lost 11-8 to the Montreal Expos despite Horner's four home runs. "I had a good week today," Horner told the Associated Press.
Mike Schmidt — April 17, 1976
The Philadelphia Phillies needed all of Schmidt's four home runs. They rallied from an 11-run deficit to beat the Chicago Cubs 18-16 in 10 innings. Schmidt homered off brothers Rick and Paul Reuschel.
Willie Mays — April 30, 1961
Mays outslugged Hank Aaron, who had two homers of his own, in the San Francisco Giants' 14-4 win over the Milwaukee Braves.
Rocky Colavito — June 10, 1959
Colavito, seen here giving hitting instructions to nuns attending a game, went a perfect 4-for-4 with a walk in the Cleveland Indians' 11-8 victory. Like Josh Hamilton, his game came against the Orioles in Baltimore.
Joe Adcock — July 31, 1954
Adcock's 5-for-5 day went homer-double-homer-homer-homer in the Milwaukee Braves' 15-7 win over the Brooklyn Dodgers. Don Newcombe was the opposing starter.
Gil Hodges — Aug. 31, 1950
Hodges went 5-for-6 with a single in the Brooklyn Dodgers' 19-3 beating of the Milwaukee Braves.
Pat Seerey — July 18, 1948
Seerey kisses the bat that brought him No. 4. The Chicago White Sox outfielder got his four homers in a 12-11, 11-inning win over the Philadelphia A's, the first game of a doubleheader. The second game was halted by the 7 p.m. Sunday curfew rule, the A's winning 6-1 after five innings.
Chuck Klein — July 10, 1936
Klein was past his heyday when he happened upon his historic game. The Hall of Famer led the National League in home runs in 1929, 1931, 1932 and 1933. He was dealt from the Chicago Cubs to the Philadelphia Phillies on May 21, 1936 and hit his four home runs for the Phillies 50 days later in a 9-6 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Lou Gehrig — June 3, 1932
Seen here with Bobby Lowe, the first player to hit four homers in a game, Gehrig almost had five home runs in the New York Yankees' 20-13 win over the Philadelphia A's. His 450-plus foot shot to center field of Shibe Park was nabbed by Al Simmons in his last at-bat. He went 4-for-6.
Ed Delahanty — July 13, 1896
The Philadlephia Phillies' Delahanty went 5-for-5 with a single in a 9-8 loss to the Chicago Colts. He only hit 101 home runs for his career, but Delahanty made the Hall of Fame in 1945.
Bobby Lowe — May 30, 1894
The Boston Beaneaters second baseman was the first player to hit four home runs in a major league game, every one of which proved necessary in Boston's 12-11 win over the Cincinnati Reds.