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Giants Legend Barry Bonds’ Total MLB Walks Adds Up to Absurd Distance

Barry Bonds walked plenty during his Major League career. But it’s the distance between Bay Area stadiums that it adds up to that is startling.
Barry Bonds.
Barry Bonds. | David Gonzales-Imagn Images

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Barry Bonds ended his Major League career with the San Francisco Giants in 2007. When he did so he led baseball in four career categories.

First was home runs, which is obvious to anyone who grew up in the Bay Area from 1993-2007. He slammed 762 home runs. He also holds the record for most single-season home runs with 73. He leads all players in bWAR, or wins above replacement, at 162.8. That’s a data point that allows baseball historians to compare players across eras.

He also led the Majors in walks (2558) and intentional walks (688). There were some days when pitchers just didn’t want to deal with the slugger. In 2004 he was intentionally walked an incredible 120 times.

A walk in baseball gets you 90 feet, whether it’s drawn by the batter or intentional. Add them up and, well, you get one of the most absurd distances in sports.

Barry Bonds, Walking Distance

San Francisco Giants legend Barry Bonds smiles before a game.
San Francisco Giants legend Barry Bonds. | Bob Kupbens-Imagn Images

Baseball History Nut, a well-followed account on X (formerly Twitter) calculated Bonds’ career walks by distance and found that combined it led to 43.6 miles. That’s 3,264 combined walks multiplied by 90 feet. The total is 292,140 feet. Divide that by a mile in feet, which is 5,280 feet, and you get 55.32 miles.

Clearly, Baseball History Nut only counted Bonds’ non-intentional walks. That’s 2,558 walks multiplied by 90 feet for 230,220 feet. Divided by 5,280 feet and it comes to 43.6 miles.

That’s all fun and games until people get creative and try to apply that distance to reality. That’s what Giants flagship radio station KNBR did recently.

It took that 43.6 miles and found that, incredibly, Bonds — or anyone else that fancies the notion — could walk from Oracle Park in San Francisco to Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara at essentially that same distance.

Per Google Maps, that drive might take someone 50 minutes (probably longer with Bay Area traffic). It would take about one hour and 41 minutes by bus and four hours and 40 minutes by bicycle. If someone walked to walk it, well get hydrated. It would likely take a normal person more than 16 hours.

So, yes, Bonds — the most productive power hitter in Major League history — took more than 16 hours’ worth of walks to first base during his 22 Major League seasons. No wonder he’s taking it easy during retirement. That walk from home to first must have gotten exhausting after a while.

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Matthew Postins
MATT POSTINS

Matthew Postins is an award-winning sports journalist who covers Major League Baseball for OnSI. He also covers the Big 12 Conference for Heartland College Sports.

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