Korea Baseball Organization third baseman
Choi Jeong holds the Korean Baseball Organization hit by pitch record with 360. It is also the world record. The all-time record for a player being hit by a pitch in
MLB is held by
Hughie Jennings, who was hit by 287 pitches between 1891 and 1903. The modern-era record is held by
Craig Biggio of the
Houston Astros, who had 285 as of the end of the 2007 season when he retired. Prior to Biggio, the modern-era record belonged to
Don Baylor, who was hit 267 times. The all-time single-season record also belongs to Jennings, who was hit 51 times during the 1896 season.
Ron Hunt of the 1971
Montreal Expos was hit 50 times during that year, the modern-era record. The single-game record is three, held by numerous players. The all-time record for pitchers is held by
Gus Weyhing with 277 (1887–1901). The modern-era career pitching record for most hit batsmen is 205 by Hall-of-Famer
Walter Johnson. The season record is 54 by
Phil Knell in 1891, and the game record is six, held by
Ed Knouff and
John Grimes. On September 1, 2021,
Austin Adams became the first pitcher hitting batters 20 or more times with 120 or less IPs in a season.
Ed Doheny hit batters 22 times in 133.2 IP in 1900. A total of ten MLB players have been hit twice in a single inning; three in
American League games, six in
National League games, and one in an interleague game: • On April 26, 1959,
Willard Schmidt of the
Cincinnati Reds became the first such player in MLB history (and in a National League game), being hit twice in the bottom of the 3rd inning by
Milwaukee Braves pitchers
Lew Burdette and
Bob Rush. • On April 29, 1962,
Frank Thomas of the
New York Mets was hit twice in the bottom of the 4th inning of game 1 of a doubleheader by
Philadelphia Phillies pitchers
Art Mahaffey and
Frank Sullivan. • On July 12, 1996,
Andrés Galarraga of the
Colorado Rockies was hit twice in the bottom of the 7th inning by
San Diego Padres pitchers
Bryce Florie and
Willie Blair. • On May 23, 1999,
Brady Anderson of the
Baltimore Orioles became the first such player in an American League game, getting hit twice in the bottom of the 1st inning by
Texas Rangers pitcher
Mike Morgan. • On September 8, 2008,
Mike Hessman of the
Detroit Tigers was hit twice in the bottom of the 2nd inning by
Oakland Athletics pitchers
Gio González and
Josh Outman. • On September 23, 2010,
José Guillén of the
San Francisco Giants was hit twice in the top of the 2nd inning by
Chicago Cubs pitcher
Ryan Dempster. • On June 18, 2012,
David DeJesus of the Chicago Cubs became the first such player in an interleague game, getting hit twice in the top of the 7th inning by
Chicago White Sox pitchers
Will Ohman and
Hector Santiago. • On April 25, 2014,
Brandon Moss of the Oakland Athletics was hit twice in the top of the 9th inning by
Houston Astros pitchers
Josh Fields and
Anthony Bass. • On April 28, 2025,
Francisco Lindor of the New York Mets was hit twice in the top of the 7th inning by
Washington Nationals pitcher
Cole Henry. • On May 31, 2025,
CJ Abrams of the Washington Nationals was hit twice in the top of the 1st inning by two different
Arizona Diamondbacks pitchers:
Brandon Pfaadt and
Scott McGough. Three times has a perfect game been broken up by the 27th batter being hit by pitch.
Hooks Wiltse,
Max Scherzer, and
Joe Musgrove hold this rare feat. All three finished with no-hitters after the hit by pitch. Scherzer's team was leading 6–0 and Musgrove's 3–0 when they pitched their no-hitters, but Wiltse's team was scoreless through 9; he pitched a 10-inning 1–0 no-hitter. The record for most hit batters in a no-hitter is three, held by
Chris Heston of the San Francisco Giants for his 2015 effort against the New York Mets. Postseason career records are held by
Greg Maddux and
Tim Wakefield—each of whom hit 9 batters—and
Shane Victorino, who was hit by pitch 11 times. ==Dangers==