30-30 club
(Redirected from 30/30 club)
The 30-30 club is a grouping of players who have reached the 30 stolen base and 30 home run plateaus in the same season.
The term "club" is used rather loosely, as it is generally used by sports writers and fans to group players together under a common heading. The word "club" was likely coined based on the original exclusiveness and rarity of a 30-30 season. Statistically, the 30-30 club is of note due to the pairing of power and speed - two measurements usually isolated from one another. For example, a slugging first baseman would not usually accumulate high stolen base totals. Likewise, a speedy center fielder may be more adept at stealing bases, but may not supply much power. Thus, many players may be able to either steal 30 bases or hit 30 home runs, but only a rare handful may be able to do both.
Trends and Breakdown[edit]
Recent trends show that club membership has steadily increased since the 1970s. Ken Williams was the first player to reach the mark in the major leagues in 1922 with 39 home runs and 37 stolen bases. He was the sole member of the club for 34 years until Willie Mays had back-to-back 30-30 seasons in 1956 and 1957. Occurrences then began to increase thereafter, as there were 2 in the 1960s, 5 (4 by Bobby Bonds) in the 1970s, 7 in the 1980s, 20 (5 by Barry Bonds) in the 1990s, and 17 (4 by Alfonso Soriano) in the 2000s. However, with the decline in popularity of the stolen base, that number fell to 10 in the 2010s, by 10 different players, but the regain in popularity of the tactic following rule changes prior to the 2023 season resulted in four players joining the club that year and three more the next season.
Most 30-30 seasons come from players who play the outfield, particularly left and right field. However, several center fielders have also enjoyed 30-30 seasons. The remaining breakdown is as follows: shortstop (7) ; third base (5) ; second base (3) ; first base (2) ; designated hitter (1). There has not been a 30-30 season recorded by a player who predominately plays catcher or pitcher.
There have been 68 30-30 seasons by 47 different players. Barry and Bobby Bonds account for 10 of those seasons between them.
30-30 Seasons in the majors[edit]
40-40 club seasons in bold.
Notes and Trivia[edit]
- A 20-20 season (20 home runs and 20 stolen bases) is also of note, however it is much more common. A 20-20 season is usually noticed on a local level by sports writers or team officials, especially if the player is a second baseman or catcher. The first and only 20-20 season by a catcher was attained by Ivan Rodriguez in 1999 with 35 home runs and 25 stolen bases.
- There have been five seasons in which four separate players recorded 30-30 seasons. The first was 1987 (Joe Carter, Eric Davis, Howard Johnson, and Darryl Strawberry). The second was 1996 (Dante Bichette, Barry Bonds, Ellis Burks, and Barry Larkin). The third was in 1997 (Jeff Bagwell, Bonds, Raul Mondesi, and Larry Walker). There was another occurence in 2011 (Ryan Braun, Jacoby Ellsbury, Matt Kemp, and Ian Kinsler), and the most recent one took place in 2023 (Ronald Acuna, Julio Rodriguez, Bobby Witt Jr. and Francisco Lindor). There were no seasons with a 30-30 player between 2013 and 2017 - a rare prolonged drought in the post-1970 era. The closest 30-30 player in 2010 was Carlos Gonzalez with 34 home runs and 26 stolen bases. In addition, other recent seasons where a player did not record a 30-30 season include 1994 - the season shortened by the player's strike. In 1994 Barry Bonds finished with 37 home runs and 29 stolen bases (112 games), while Sammy Sosa also had a shot with 25 home runs and 22 steals (105 games). During the shortened 1981 season, another strike-shortened season, Andre Dawson finished with 24 home runs and 26 steals in 103 games.
- The players with the most 30-30 seasons are Bobby Bonds and his son Barry with 5 each. The only other players with more than 2 are Alfonso Soriano with 4, and Howard Johnson with 3. Players with two 30-30 seasons: Willie Mays, Ron Gant, Sammy Sosa, Jeff Bagwell, Raul Mondesi, Vladimir Guerrero, Bobby Abreu, Ian Kinsler, Ryan Braun, Ronald Acuna, José Ramírez and Bobby Witt Jr.
- The rarer 30-40 season has been repeated only by Bobby Bonds (4), Barry Bonds (2), and Alfonso Soriano (2), the 40-30 season only by Barry Bonds (2) and Jeff Bagwell (2), and only Barry Bonds and Alfonso Soriano have had at least one 40-30 and one 30-40 season. There have been only three 30-50 seasons (Eric Davis, Barry Bonds and Ronald Acuna), and no 50-30 seasons. For more elite seasons, see the 40-40 club.
- In 2024, Shohei Ohtani became the only player to have 50-50 season; he recorded both his first 30-30 and 40-40 season that year.
- The 30-30 season has only been accomplished by two players on the same team during the same season twice: the New York Mets in 1987 and the Colorado Rockies in 1996.
- There is a nightclub in Manhattan, New York with the name "Club 30-30", however this name is presumed to be based on the address (which is 30-30), and not the grouping of baseball players. The rapper/CEO Jay-Z owns a nightclub named "The 40-40 Club", also located in Manhattan. The name is based on the 40-40 club, implying a sense of prestige and exclusiveness [1].
First player to reach 30-30 in different minor leagues and international leagues[edit]
(far from complete)
- Jeromy Burnitz, Eastern League, 1991
- Jim Steels, Mexican League, 1991
- Jae-hong Park, Korea Baseball Organization, 1996
- Chih-Sheng Lin, Chinese Professional Baseball League, 2015
No one has gone 30-30 in the Taiwan Major League, Arizona Fall League or Hoofdklasse Honkbal through 2014
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