Batters •
Madison Bumgarner (
SF): • Became the first pitcher in Major League history to hit two home runs on Opening Day. •
Matt Holliday (
NYY): • Recorded his 2,000th career hit with a single in the first inning against the
Baltimore Orioles on April 8. He became the 281st player to reach this mark. •
George Springer (
HOU): • Hit his Major League-record fourth leadoff homer in the first nine games of a season against the
Seattle Mariners on April 11. •
Trey Mancini (
BAL): • With his two home runs on April 16 against the
Toronto Blue Jays, Mancini tied the Major League rookie home run record with seven home runs in his first 12 career games. He ties the record that was set by
Trevor Story (2016) and
Dino Restelli (1949). •
Albert Pujols (
LAA): • Became the all-time RBI leader for Dominican-born Major Leaguers with his 1,832nd RBI passing
Manny Ramirez. He delivered in the third inning with a single against the
Toronto Blue Jays on April 23. • Hit his 600th career home run against the
Minnesota Twins on June 3 and became the first member of the
600 home run club to earn his membership with a grand slam. He became the ninth player to reach this mark. •
Miguel Cabrera (
DET): • Recorded his 450th career home run in the third inning against the
Cleveland Indians on May 2. He became the 38th player to reach this mark. •
Aaron Judge (
NYY): • Became the youngest player in Major League history to hit 13 home runs in his team's first 26 games with his home run against the
Toronto Blue Jays on May 3. • Set the Yankee franchise rookie record for home runs by hitting his 30th on July 7 against the
Milwaukee Brewers. He broke the record that was set by
Joe DiMaggio in 1936. He also joins
Mark McGwire as the only rookies in Major League history to reach 30 home runs before the All-Star break. • Set the Major League rookie record for home runs in a season by hitting his 50th of the year on September 25 against the
Kansas City Royals. He broke McGwire's record that was set in 1987. •
Jose Reyes (
NYM): • Recorded his 2,000th career hit with a single in the first inning against the
Los Angeles Angels on May 20. He became the 282nd player to reach this mark. • Recorded his 500th career stolen base in the eighth inning against the
San Diego Padres on July 24. He became the 39th player to reach this mark. •
Giancarlo Stanton (
MIA): • Became the franchise leader in RBIs recording his 579th with a home run on June 2 against the
Arizona Diamondbacks. He broke the record that was held by
Mike Lowell. • Set the franchise record for home runs in a season by hitting his 43rd home run in the first inning against the
San Francisco Giants on August 14. He broke the record that was set by
Gary Sheffield in 1996. •
Scooter Gennett (
CIN): • Became the 17th player in Major League history and the first Red in franchise history to
hit four home runs in a game. He achieved the feat against the
St. Louis Cardinals on June 6. He hit a grand slam in the third inning, a two-run homer in the fourth, a solo shot in the sixth, and another two-run homer in the eighth. Gennett also became the first player in Major League history with five hits, four homers and 10 RBIs in a game. •
Cody Bellinger (
LAD): • With his fourth multi-homer game on June 13 against the
Cleveland Indians, Bellinger became the fastest player in Major League history to have four multi-homer outbursts, doing so in 45 career games. He broke the record of 63 games set by
Bob Horner in 1978. • With his 21st homer on June 19 against the
New York Mets, Bellinger became the fastest rookie player in Major League history to reach the mark, doing so in just 51 career games. He broke the record of 55 games set by
Wally Berger in 1930. •
Adrián Beltré (
TEX): • Recorded his 450th career home run in the ninth inning against the
Cleveland Indians on June 27. He became the 39th player to reach this mark. • Recorded his 600th career double in the first inning against the
Boston Red Sox on July 4. He became the 17th player to reach this mark. • Recorded his 5,000th career total base with a home run in the second inning against the
Los Angeles Angels on July 7. He became the 21st player to reach this mark. • Recorded his
3,000th career hit with a double in the fourth inning against the
Baltimore Orioles on July 30. He became the 31st player, and the first Dominican-born player, to reach this mark. •
Mookie Betts (
BOS): • Tied a Major League record by recording eight RBIs from the lead-off spot against the
Toronto Blue Jays on July 2. The others to achieve this mark were
Ronnie Belliard (
Colorado Rockies, 2003),
Jim Northrup (
Detroit Tigers, 1973),
Bill Glynn (
Cleveland Indians, 1954) and
Augie Bergamo (
St. Louis Cardinals, 1945). •
Ichiro Suzuki (
MIA): • Became the all-time leader for hits for a player born outside of the United States, with a single in the eighth inning against the
St. Louis Cardinals on July 6. His single, which was his 3,054th career hit, broke the record held by
Rod Carew. •
Victor Martinez (
DET): • Recorded his 2,000th career hit with a single in the second inning against the
Cleveland Indians on July 7. He became the 283rd player to reach this mark. •
Chase Utley (
LAD): • Recorded his 1,000th career RBI with a double in the eighth inning against the
Kansas City Royals on July 7. He became the 283rd player to reach this mark. •
Ryan Zimmerman (
WSH): • Set the Expos/Nationals franchise record for home runs with his first inning home run against the
Cincinnati Reds on July 17. The home run was Zimmerman's 235th career home run, passing the record that was set by
Vladimir Guerrero. •
Edwin Encarnación (
CLE): • Recorded his 1,000th career RBI with a grand slam in the 11th inning against the
Los Angeles Angels on July 25. He became the 284th player to reach this mark. •
Brian Goodwin /
Wilmer Difo /
Bryce Harper /
Ryan Zimmerman (
WSH): • Became the eighth group of players to hit four consecutive home runs in the fourth inning on July 27 against the
Milwaukee Brewers. •
Brian Goodwin /
Wilmer Difo /
Bryce Harper /
Ryan Zimmerman /
Anthony Rendon (
WSH): • Become the sixth group of players in Major League history to hit five home runs in one inning in the fourth inning against the
Toronto Blue Jays on July 27. •
Steve Pearce (
TOR): • Tied the Major League record for most walk-off grand slams hit by a single batter within a single season by hitting his second on July 30.
Cy Williams and
Jim Presley had accomplished the feat in 1926 and 1986, respectively. With Pearce's previous one coming only three days prior on July 27, Pearce became the first player in Major League history to hit multiple walk-off grand slams within the span of a single week. •
Nick Markakis (
ATL): • Recorded his 2,000th career hit with a single in the fourth inning against the
Los Angeles Dodgers on August 3. He became the 284th player to reach this mark. •
Robinson Cano (
SEA): • Recorded his 500th career double in the first inning against the
Kansas City Royals on August 4. He became the 63rd player to reach this mark. •
Adrián González (
LAD): • Recorded his 2,000th career hit with a double in the sixth inning against the
Pittsburgh Pirates on August 22. He became the 285th player to reach this mark. •
Rhys Hoskins (
PHI): • Hit his 11th home run in his first 18 Major League games on August 27 against the
Chicago Cubs. He became the fastest player since 1913 to hit their first 11 home runs. He also did it in 17 fewer
at bats than any player in history. •
Brandon Phillips (
LAA)/(
ATL): • Recorded his 2,000th career hit with a single in the first inning against the
Philadelphia Phillies on August 30. He became the 286th player to reach this mark. •
José Ramírez (
CLE): • Hit three doubles and two home runs against the
Detroit Tigers on September 3. He became the 13th player to have five extra-base hits in a game. •
J.D. Martinez (
AZ)/(
DET): • Became the 18th player in Major League history to hit four home runs in a game on September 4 against the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
Pitchers ====
No-hitters==== •
Edinson Vólquez (
MIA): • Threw his first career no-hitter by defeating the
Arizona Diamondbacks 3–0 on June 3. Vólquez walked two and struck out ten while facing the minimum on 98 pitches, 65 of them being strikes. This was the sixth no-hitter in franchise history.
Other pitching accomplishments •
Chris Sale (
BOS): • Tied a Major League record by striking out ten or more batters in eight consecutive starts. • Became the fastest pitcher to reach 1,500 strikeouts in Major League history on August 29. Sale struck out
Kevin Pillar in the second inning. Sale took 1,290 innings to reach this plateau breaking the record of 1,303 innings held by
Kerry Wood. •
Clayton Kershaw (
LAD): • Recorded his 2,000th career strikeout against the
Milwaukee Brewers on June 2 by striking out
Jonathan Villar in the second inning. He became the 79th player to reach this mark. Kershaw reached this mark in 1,836 innings, then the third-fastest total in Major League history, trailing only Hall of Famers
Pedro Martínez () and
Randy Johnson (1,734). •
Max Scherzer (
WSH): • Recorded his 2,000th career strikeout against the
Texas Rangers on June 11 by striking out
Nomar Mazara to start the fourth inning. He became the 80th player to reach this mark. Scherzer became the third fastest ever to reach this mark by innings by reaching this mark in 1,784 innings, trailing only Pedro Martínez and Randy Johnson. •
Kenley Jansen (
LAD): • Recorded his 200th career save by closing out a 9–7 win against the
Cincinnati Reds on June 11. He became the 49th player to reach this mark. •
Jon Lester (
CHC): • Recorded his 150th career win with a victory against the
New York Mets on June 13. He became the 257th player to reach this mark. • Recorded his 2,000th career strikeout against the
Arizona Diamondbacks on August 1 by striking out
Jack Reinheimer in the fourth inning. He became the 82nd player, and 25th left-hander, to reach this mark. •
Corey Kluber (
CLE): • Became the fastest in franchise history to record 1,000 career strikeouts by striking out
Yasiel Puig of the
Los Angeles Dodgers on June 15 in the fifth inning. He accomplished this feat in 148 games, breaking the record of 167 games set by
Bob Feller. •
James Shields (
CWS): • Recorded his 2,000th career strikeout against the
Oakland Athletics on June 24 by striking out
Khris Davis to end the second inning. He became the 81st player to reach this mark. •
Zach Britton (
BAL): • Set the American League for most consecutive saves converted by closing out the Orioles win against the
Houston Astros on July 23 for his 55th in a row. •
Aroldis Chapman (
NYY): • Recorded his 200th career save by closing out a 3–2 win against the
Tampa Bay Rays on September 13. He became the 50th player to reach this mark.
Miscellaneous • The
Arizona Diamondbacks set a Major League record by recording nine consecutive games where Arizona pitchers recorded ten or more
strikeouts between April 24 and May 3, 2017. The Diamondbacks recorded their strikeouts during a four-game set with the
San Diego Padres, followed by three games against the
Colorado Rockies, and the first two games of a three-game set against the
Washington Nationals. Fourteen different Diamondbacks pitchers recorded a total of 113 strikeouts over the nine game period. • The
New York Yankees and
Chicago Cubs set a Major League record for most strikeouts in a game with 48 on May 7 in a game that lasted 18 innings. The previous record of 43 was set on July 9, 1971, in a game between the
California Angels and the
Oakland Athletics. •
Joe Maddon became the 63rd manager in Major League history to have 1,000 or more victories as his
Chicago Cubs defeated the
Cincinnati Reds on May 15. He reached this mark in 1,871 games. • The
Los Angeles Dodgers and
Milwaukee Brewers set a National League record for most strikeouts in a game with 42 on June 2 in a game that lasted 12 innings. The Brewers tied their own Major League record for strikeouts in a game with 26. • On June 3, Major League Baseball set a record for the most
grand slams hit in a single day with seven. In order, they were hit by
Kyle Schwarber of the
Chicago Cubs,
Travis Shaw of the
Milwaukee Brewers,
Chris Taylor of the
Los Angeles Dodgers,
Matt Adams of the
Atlanta Braves,
Ian Desmond of the
Colorado Rockies,
Albert Pujols of the
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, which was the 600th home run of his career, and
Mike Zunino of the
Seattle Mariners. •
Oakland Athletics rookies
Matt Olson,
Jaycob Brugman, and
Franklin Barreto made history when they became the first teammates ever to all hit their first career home runs in the same game against the
Chicago White Sox on June 24. All three of them homered off of
James Shields, who recorded his 2,000th career strikeout during the game. • With their 11–0 victory against the
Detroit Tigers on September 11, the
Cleveland Indians became the first team to have a +100 or better run differential in a 19-game span since the
1939 New York Yankees and the first team to allow 32 runs or fewer in a 19-game span since the
1916 New York Giants. On September 13 they set the
American League record for
consecutive wins with 21 with a 5–3 win over the
Detroit Tigers; they also moved into a tie with the 1935 Chicago Cubs for second place all-time. The Indians subsequently claimed sole possession of the second-longest winning streak all time with their 22nd consecutive victory on September 14 with a 3–2 walk off win in extra innings against the Kansas City Royals, only for their winning streak to come to an end the next day with a 4–3 loss to the Royals. • In their 16–0 shutout victory over the
San Diego Padres on September 12, the
Minnesota Twins became the first MLB team ever to homer in each of the first seven innings. • On September 19, the
Royals'
Alex Gordon hit a solo home run against the
Toronto Blue Jays for the 5,694th combined home run of the season across Major League Baseball. This broke the previous record of 5,693 home runs hit in 2000 for the most combined home runs hit in a single season in Major League history. It would finish the season hitting a combined 6,105 home runs across Major League Baseball. ==Other news==