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Single Season HR Records

Posted by Steve Lombardi on April 13, 2011

Have you ever looked at the single season HR records in terms of pre-1987, post-2003 and during the period 1987 through 2003?

Here are the breakdowns...

First, Pre-1987:

Rk Player HR Year Age Tm Lg G PA
1 Roger Maris 61 1961 26 NYY AL 161 698
2 Babe Ruth 60 1927 32 NYY AL 151 691
3 Babe Ruth 59 1921 26 NYY AL 152 693
4 Hank Greenberg 58 1938 27 DET AL 155 681
5 Jimmie Foxx 58 1932 24 PHA AL 154 701
6 Hack Wilson 56 1930 30 CHC NL 155 709
7 Mickey Mantle 54 1961 29 NYY AL 153 646
8 Ralph Kiner 54 1949 26 PIT NL 152 667
9 Babe Ruth 54 1928 33 NYY AL 154 684
10 Babe Ruth 54 1920 25 NYY AL 142 616
11 George Foster 52 1977 28 CIN NL 158 689
12 Willie Mays 52 1965 34 SFG NL 157 638
13 Mickey Mantle 52 1956 24 NYY AL 150 652
14 Willie Mays 51 1955 24 NYG NL 152 670
15 Ralph Kiner 51 1947 24 PIT NL 152 666
16 Johnny Mize 51 1947 34 NYG NL 154 664
17 Jimmie Foxx 50 1938 30 BOS AL 149 685
18 Harmon Killebrew 49 1969 33 MIN AL 162 709
19 Frank Robinson 49 1966 30 BAL AL 155 680
20 Harmon Killebrew 49 1964 28 MIN AL 158 682
21 Willie Mays 49 1962 31 SFG NL 162 706
22 Ted Kluszewski 49 1954 29 CIN NL 149 659
23 Lou Gehrig 49 1936 33 NYY AL 155 719
24 Lou Gehrig 49 1934 31 NYY AL 154 690
25 Babe Ruth 49 1930 35 NYY AL 145 676
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 4/13/2011.

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Next, from 1987 through 2003:

Rk Player HR Year Age Tm Lg G PA
1 Barry Bonds 73 2001 36 SFG NL 153 664
2 Mark McGwire 70 1998 34 STL NL 155 681
3 Sammy Sosa 66 1998 29 CHC NL 159 722
4 Mark McGwire 65 1999 35 STL NL 153 661
5 Sammy Sosa 64 2001 32 CHC NL 160 711
6 Sammy Sosa 63 1999 30 CHC NL 162 712
7 Mark McGwire 58 1997 33 TOT ML 156 657
8 Alex Rodriguez 57 2002 26 TEX AL 162 725
9 Luis Gonzalez 57 2001 33 ARI NL 162 728
10 Ken Griffey 56 1998 28 SEA AL 161 720
11 Ken Griffey 56 1997 27 SEA AL 157 704
12 Jim Thome 52 2002 31 CLE AL 147 613
13 Alex Rodriguez 52 2001 25 TEX AL 162 732
14 Mark McGwire 52 1996 32 OAK AL 130 548
15 Cecil Fielder 51 1990 26 DET AL 159 673
16 Sammy Sosa 50 2000 31 CHC NL 156 705
17 Greg Vaughn 50 1998 32 SDP NL 158 661
18 Brady Anderson 50 1996 32 BAL AL 149 687
19 Albert Belle 50 1995 28 CLE AL 143 629
20 Sammy Sosa 49 2002 33 CHC NL 150 666
21 Jim Thome 49 2001 30 CLE AL 156 644
22 Todd Helton 49 2001 27 COL NL 159 696
23 Shawn Green 49 2001 28 LAD NL 161 701
24 Barry Bonds 49 2000 35 SFG NL 143 607
25 Albert Belle 49 1998 31 CHW AL 163 706
26 Larry Walker 49 1997 30 COL NL 153 664
27 Ken Griffey 49 1996 26 SEA AL 140 638
28 Andre Dawson 49 1987 32 CHC NL 153 662
29 Mark McGwire 49 1987 23 OAK AL 151 641
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 4/13/2011.

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Finally, Post-2003:

Rk Player HR Year Age Tm Lg G PA
1 Ryan Howard 58 2006 26 PHI NL 159 704
2 Jose Bautista 54 2010 29 TOR AL 161 683
3 Alex Rodriguez 54 2007 31 NYY AL 158 708
4 David Ortiz 54 2006 30 BOS AL 151 686
5 Andruw Jones 51 2005 28 ATL NL 160 672
6 Prince Fielder 50 2007 23 MIL NL 158 681
7 Albert Pujols 49 2006 26 STL NL 143 634
8 Ryan Howard 48 2008 28 PHI NL 162 700
9 Alex Rodriguez 48 2005 29 NYY AL 162 715
10 Adrian Beltre 48 2004 25 LAD NL 156 657
11 Albert Pujols 47 2009 29 STL NL 160 700
12 Ryan Howard 47 2007 27 PHI NL 144 648
13 David Ortiz 47 2005 29 BOS AL 159 713
14 Prince Fielder 46 2009 25 MIL NL 162 719
15 Carlos Pena 46 2007 29 TBD AL 148 612
16 Alfonso Soriano 46 2006 30 WSN NL 159 728
17 Derrek Lee 46 2005 29 CHC NL 158 691
18 Adam Dunn 46 2004 24 CIN NL 161 681
19 Albert Pujols 46 2004 24 STL NL 154 692
20 Ryan Howard 45 2009 29 PHI NL 160 703
21 Lance Berkman 45 2006 30 HOU NL 152 646
22 Manny Ramirez 45 2005 33 BOS AL 152 650
23 Barry Bonds 45 2004 39 SFG NL 147 617
24 Mark Reynolds 44 2009 25 ARI NL 155 662
25 Jermaine Dye 44 2006 32 CHW AL 146 611
26 Mark Teixeira 43 2005 25 TEX AL 162 730
27 Manny Ramirez 43 2004 32 BOS AL 152 663
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 4/13/2011.

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What I find interesting here is that, when you look at the "leaders" in each group, the Post-2003 group spans from 2004 through 2010, and, the 1987-2003 group spans from 1987 to 2002.  But, the Pre-1987 group spans from 1920 to 1977.  So, from 1978 through 1986, no one in that time period could crack this leader list.

Think we will ever see a time, now, or in the future, where we go nine years or so without anyone coming near the single season HR "leaders" in his particular "power era"?

32 Responses to “Single Season HR Records”

  1. Thomas Court Says:

    It always amazes me that Sosa could hit 60+ home runs on three occasions and not lead the league in any of them. Speaks to the absurdity of home runs in the steroid era.

    The only similar comparison to this is Juan Marichal in the pither's era 1960s. Every National League pitcher since the CY Young was invented that has won 25 games has won the award; except the three years that Marichal accomplished the feat. To quote Bill James: "Not only did Marichal fail to win any of the three awards, he actually failed to gather a vote in any of the three seasons." He was done in by the best seasons of Sandy Koufax ('63'66) and Bob Gibson ('68).

  2. Doug Says:

    We may be heading into such an era now of diminished HR numbers.

    Notice that in your post-2003 list, 21 of 27 seasons are from the first 4 years (through 2007), but only 6 from the last 3 years (and only one from 2010).

  3. michael collins Says:

    Not one Hank Aaron

  4. dukeofflatbush Says:

    2007-08-09-10, had only three American leaguers crack 40, albeit 2 were 54, but four years-three players, DHs and all. In '06 there were 4 American leaguers that slapped 40. One more than the next 4 years.
    I'd say homers are definitely in decline.

  5. dukeofflatbush Says:

    Sorry Doug,
    You made my point as I was writing it. Shoulda refreshed the page.

  6. Johnny Twisto Says:

    Think we will ever see a time, now, or in the future, where we go nine years or so without anyone coming near the single season HR "leaders" in his particular "power era"?

    If you compare a 100-year period to an 8-year period, it's exceedingly more likely the former will have a long stretch in which no one qualifies.

  7. Brett Says:

    Average age of the 3 groups:

    Pre-87: 29.04 years
    87-03: 30.17 years
    03-11: 28.37 years

    An old Ruth and an old Bonds & McGwire drives up the ages of the first two categories.

  8. TheIronHorse Says:

    On the list from 1987-03, Brady Anderson sticks out. Only 210 career
    homers. Cecil is next lowest at 319. That is a significant difference.

    Brady isn't the only one whom suspicions can be cast at.

    But his peak was the most significant.

  9. nightfly Says:

    From 1965 (Mays) to 1990 (Fielder), a span of 24 seasons ('66-'89), George Foster is the only man to hit 50 or more homers in a season (1977).

    I did a quick examination a few years ago about home runs... how the real effects weren't just in the top numbers, but in the number of guys who were suddenly hitting 20 and 30 home runs. There were years when entire teams would only hit 75 homers, when a team would have a leader in the teens somewhere. In the larger span of 1974-1992, there were a few spikes in home run rates, but nothing like the homer-per-game rates from 1994-2009 inclusive.... and it was a rising tide that lifted all boats.

    Aha, found it. I checked 87-90, and the number of people who hit twenty home runs were 78, 43, 36, 43. (This was before BR.com and the Play Index, so I had to actually load up the team pages elsewhere and count it by hand - it may be off.) Further back, the numbers for '83-'86: 41, 49, 59, 60. With the exception of the rabbit-ball year, 1987, the number of 30+ stayed relatively stable from '83-'90: 12, 10, 13, 13, 28 (!!), 5, 10, 12.

    In 2004, which is when I wrote the post, there were *93 guys* with at least twenty taters. Everybody was just hitting mad dingers - middle infielders, catchers, seven-hitters, two-hitters - if your cat played major league ball in the steroid era it probably hit 20 homers, right along with Mark DeRosa, Jacques Jones, Kelly Shoppach, and J J Hardy.

  10. dukeofflatbush Says:

    Mr. Whiskers only had 17 HRs but strained his oblique in August.

  11. kingcrab Says:

    looking at this year's hr leaders, burrell has 4 homers and 4 ribs, has there anyone else that has been as stingy with his driving in baserunners to start the season?

  12. Neil L. Says:

    Hmmm..... trying ti digest all the data here, will this year's HR leader be under 50?

    Who will it be?

    Fielder? Pujols? Cabrera? Rodriguez?

    Go ahead, go out on a limb........

  13. Tom Says:

    Two factors, it was researched by URI that MLB changes the ball in 1998, maybe it was 1999 and that the ball itself had much more bounce. It is on Mike Silva's blog.

    Secondly you had expansion in 93 and 98, that also was a large factor as homeruns always go up during that time period.

    There are more factors than drugs, but drugs are not new to baseball and for my money, you say Brady Anderson but I always look at Davey Johnson and his 43 homeruns, 17 of which came on road in 73, when Tom House said - in 60's and 70's we never got beat we got out milligrammed. Until 2010 it was Johnson who had the biggest hr jump in history.

  14. -mark Says:

    I wonder if it will be possible to statistically take into account the steroid effect? It seems to me that it is in there, and pretty late as well.

    For example, looking at Bonds v A-Rod makes an interesting comparison. The general supposition is that he went on the juice around the end of 1999. Before 2000 he was pretty much a high 30s HR hitter. After that he went to high 40s with that 73 in there. Interestingly, for me, is that he was 35 when this happened, which is kind of odd. Power normally declines with age, no?

    A-Rod started in 1996 showing pretty good power, then went ballistic in 1998 and remained that way through 2007. Now he is back to being a 30 run kind of guy at 32. A juice effect? I suspect so, though we won't know for real.

    I suspect that it might be some time before we get above 56 again. Then, baseball has always managed to surprise.

  15. SABRSteve Says:

    @ #11 Kingcrab: Howie Kendrick is also 4 & 4. The next lowest RBI total is 7 for Jorge Posada.

  16. steve Says:

    Nice work. Born in 1972, I grew up thinking 50 home runs was an astronomical total - providing legendary status to guys like Mantle and Mays who reached that number multiple times.

    The 'live ball'/'steroid'/tight zone'/'small park' phenomonon really started in 1993 or 1994. So I think you can extend your first sample through that date for maximum effect.

    I probably would group home run history into three segments;

    1871-1920 Dead Ball
    1921-1993 Live Ball
    1994-2007 Juiced Ball
    2010- Live Ball

    It seems we're finally reaching some level of stability now that matches what we were seeing in the 1950-1965 period. Which was, at the time, a home run era.

    I think the reason for this stabilization has just as much to do with a standardized strike zone (Quest Tec) as it does the drug tests. I think the remaining excess over the 1970-80s era is the small park effect. But its just conjecture since I have no data to support this.

  17. steve Says:

    I guess I added a fourth segment:)

  18. Johnny Twisto Says:

    Home runs have *generally* trended upwards since 1920. We will need much more perspective to know what 2010 meant. Like the stock market, if you look at any single season or even a 5- or 10-year period, you may see HR drop or stay flat. But over the long period they have always been rising. Even in the "year of the pitcher" last season, there were more HR per game than any season in history prior to 1994 (except 1987). There are so many more factors involved than STEROIDS.

    Correlation of HR/G to year for 1918-2010 is 0.85. Pick any two random seasons during that span, and chances are there were more homers hit in the later.

  19. Michael E Sullivan Says:

    the late 60s thru early 80s were something of a second dead-ball era, nothing like the first, but significantly lower runs, obp, and power than either 1920-1965 or 1987-2011. I remember reading columns in the 80s suggesting that the then current home run records (Maris and Aaron) were unbreakable, and that Foster might end up being the last guy ever to hit 50 HRs in a season.

    Looking at how many seasons were over 40 home runs in some 21 years periods points out this difference very clearly.

    1966-1986 had 40 seasons of 40 or more home runs. 1945-1965 had 62, and note that major expansion happened in the 60s, so you would expect a lot *more* big homer seasons all else being equal, since you have a lot more batters.

    From 1924-1944, there were 89 40+ HR seasons. And again, fewer opportunities than even in 1945-1965 since expansion started in 1960.

    Considering the different number of teams, the modern "juiced" era of 1987-2007 and its 158 seasons is roughly equivalent to the 1924-1944 era.

    It's funny, we lionize Ruth and Gehrig who played in an era that was every bit as run and power heavy as all but the peak years of late, but we tend to assume that most of the 40 homer guys from the 90s/2000s were just juicers. But it really could be mostly a combination of parks, ball, strategy and pitching. Because that's what it was in the 1920s and 30s.

    Ruth was certainly great, and he was a game changer because nobody really tried to hit home runs before he started. But was he really better than Mays or Aaron or Bonds? I don't know, but his era helps his HR totals nearly as much as Bonds era and steroids helped his. "random" 1920s/30s guys often hit a lot of home runs, just like "random" guys today.

  20. dukeofflatbush Says:

    @ Mike E,

    I tend to think those numbers could be more useful if we knew how many guys that encompassed. For instance, the 24-44 time frame has 89 40 HR seasons, but by how many guys? Ruth, Gehrig, Foxx?
    And those are 21 year periods, and only 28 40+ HR seasons occurred during 24-44.

  21. DavidRF Says:

    @19
    The live-ball era didn't start until Ruth was in his mid-20s and he was still outhomering entire teams in 1929 at age 34. "random" 1920s players didn't hit that many HR's. The increased HR's of that era was more isolated to a handful of star players than it is today.

  22. TrivialSteve Says:

    Look at the age distributions. The Pre-1987 era is pretty evenly distributed between ages 26 - 34, which is pretty standard for an athletes peak performance. The post-2003 period is mostly bunched around 28 - 30, which you would expect given the more recent start date. The 1987-2003 era is between 26 - 35, but its bunched between 30 - 33. This is exactly the age when sluggers begin to see their power naturally begin the downward slide. Sort that era by age and you see the old guys are Bonds, McGwire and Sosa; the only non-steroids names in the top ten are Luis Gonzalez and Greg Vaughn. Shift that era's boundaries by a year and you add a 39 year old Bonds and a 32-year old Manny. Its like there should be a big blackhole in the MLB record book from 1996 through 2004.

  23. TrivialSteve Says:

    Not to harp on it, but Bonds's numbers are insane. As far as I can tell, no athlete in the history of major athletic competition (which really only goes back 150 years) has ever done what Bonds did: increase his already great performance by +50%. Through age 34, Bonds averaged 34 HRs a season. From age 35 on, he averaged 52, a 53% power increase at the age when most pros are in steady (if not steep) decline. Had Jordan done this when he came back to the Wizards, he would have averaged 48 ppg; had Sanders done this instead of retiring, he would have averaged 2,400 rushing yards a season. Granted, baseball is physically less demanding than either BB or FB, but even if Jordan and Sanders had had only 1/2 the performance increase Bonds did at similar ages, Jordan would have averaged almost 40 ppg for his last few years and Sanders would have spent the last few years of his career rushing for over 2,000 yards a season.

  24. Tom Says:

    For the record only Barry Bonds and Hank Aaron performed so well at a advanced age for a consistent time period. 17, 498 players or so . . . They both set career highs in ops, ops+ and Aaron performed better age 37 - 39 than 30 - 36. Much like Bonds . . . .

  25. dukeofflatbush Says:

    Johnny Twisto,
    I know the steroid era is going to be with us and in our minds, just as the lowering of the mounds in '69 and the ball going 'live' in '21, but can't we consider some of the advantage was taken away now that we know several high profile pitchers were just as 'juiced' as their counterparts.
    Just a thought.

  26. dukeofflatbush Says:

    @ the earlier post that said Bonds went from a 30+ HR guy to a 40 + HR guy, has to remember he also lost nearly 100 ABs a year after his 73 to both IBB & traditional BBs. His rate was off the charts in his late 30's, he just saw maybe two or three strikes a game.

  27. Frank Clingenpeel Says:

    Going out on Neil L.'s limb:

    The NL leader, for the first time; Joey Votto, with 42.

    And Pujols will beat him out for the MVP.

  28. Neil L. Says:

    @27

    Frank, you have stones to pick Votto for HR leader. He may strike out the most in the majors this year but I'm not convinced he can hit 40+

    Speaking of power hitters and strikeouts, are HR guys always "streaky"?

  29. Mike Felber Says:

    Bonds also had a personally small Strike zone, he got more start treatment than Jordon.

  30. Neil L. Says:

    Mike, in your opinion, how and approximately when did that come about for Bonds?

  31. Mike Felber Says:

    When you are great & famous even the arbiters of the sport are impressed & intimidated by you often. And subconsciously even those supposed to be impartial all want to have the legendary players succeed & emotionally identified with them.

  32. Michael E Sullivan Says:

    well you have a point duke, feel free to figure it out, I just plugged those years into a PI search and got a list of 89 seasons. It is very likely that a small group of hall of fame power hitters are responsible for a large share. OTOH, that's true for the other time periods as well.

    Remember, there are a lot more players today than there were in 1929.