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Same number of homers every year in a career

Posted by Andy on April 1, 2009

While I was writing the post for Scott Coolbaugh's 1989 Topps Major League Debut baseball card over on my other blog, Traded Sets, I noticed that Coolbaugh had exactly 2 homers in every year of his 4-year career.

He's the only guy to have 2 HR in each year of a 4-year career.

These 5 guys all had exactly 1 HR in each of their first 4 years:

                   From  To   Ages Seasons Link to Individual Seasons
+-----------------+----+----+-----+-------+------------------------------+
 Rey Ordonez       1996 1999 24-27       4 Ind. Seasons
 Carlos Perez      1995 1999 24-28       4 Ind. Seasons
 Dan Briggs        1975 1978 22-25       4 Ind. Seasons
 Chris Arnold      1971 1974 23-26       4 Ind. Seasons
 Johnny Klippstein 1950 1953 22-25       4 Ind. Seasons

However, they all had careers longer than 4 years, so they don't qualify as having hit the same number of homers each year of their career.

I did some searching for guys who hit more than 2 homers (and the same number of homers) in each of their first 4 years and couldn't find anybody.

I also did some searching for guys who hit the same number of homers in their first 3 years.

These guys all hit 3 each of their first 3 years:

+-----------------+----+----+-----+-------+------------------------------+
 Robert Fick       1998 2000 24-26       3 Ind. Seasons
 George Williams   1995 1997 26-28       3 Ind. Seasons
 Dave Clark        1986 1988 23-25       3 Ind. Seasons                   

But all had careers longer than 3 years.

Jason Lane had 4 HR each of his first 3 years, but he's still active (although didn't get to the majors last year.)

A guy I'd never heard of, Willie Kamm, had 6 HR each of his first 3 years but played 13 years total. Similar story for Bobby Morgan who started with triple 7's. And Lloyd Moseby with 9's.

Can anybody find a guy to rival Coolbaugh in this stat? How about for something other than HR?

(Of course, I'm not considering guys who hit zero homers each year...there are plenty of those.)

14 Responses to “Same number of homers every year in a career”

  1. cboone21 Says:

    Adam Dunn has hit exactly 40 for 4 years running. Not at the start of his career, but still really cool.

  2. Andy Says:

    Yeah, lots of examples of that--Fred Lynn did something similar for example. 40 is a nice round number, though.

  3. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    Another notable repeaters I can remember (in the middle of careers) are Eric Gagne pitching 82.1 IP three straight seasons and Vinny Castilla with the same triple crown stats two straight years. I think we had another thread about that some time ago, but I can't find it.

  4. statboy Says:

    Al Orth hit 1 HR in each of his first 7 seasons.

  5. Raphy Says:

    Johnny - The thread is called "Jay Gibbons" from June 11, 2008. I'd post a link ,but for some reason it won't let me.

  6. TheGoof Says:

    Ordonez hit his lone home run in September for all four years.

  7. leatherman Says:

    Shawn Hare, John Knox, and Byron Houck all had 4 year careers with exactly one double each year.

  8. leatherman Says:

    Some other interesting stuff:

    The three guys above all had exactly one TRIPLE in their career. In all three cases, it was during their third year. Hare and Knox never hit a home run, but Houck hit one. Had he not hit that home run, all three would have identical doubles, triples, and home runs for each year of their career.

    Jack Harshman finished his career with exactly 1 double for 7 straight seasons.

    Chad Moeller, Reid Nichols, and Lew Richie began their career with 6 straight seasons with exactly 1 triple. However, all three of them played a couple seasons past those first 6.

    Mickey Doolan had either 1 or 2 home runs in his first 12 seasons.

  9. jackfish Says:

    Ken Griffey Jr had exactly 3 triples, 56 home runs, 76 walks and 121 strike outs in back-to-back seasons (1997-98).

    Twins pitcher Ray Corin struck out 83 batters and won 8 games for 3 consecutive seasons (1971-73).

    In the 2001 post season Randy Johnson shut down the Braves in game 1 of the NCLS (9 IP, 3 Hits, 0 Runs, 0 Earned Runs 1 Walk, 11 Strike Outs & a 0.00 ERA). Less than 2 weeks later he pitched game 2 of the World Series and posted the same exact numbers against the NY Yankees in every single catagory.

  10. JoeHova Says:

    Not only did Scott Coolbaugh hit 2 home runs during each of the four years of his career, his brother Mike also hit 2 home runs during his first year. So the Coolbaughs had a family streak of 5 seasons of exactly 2 home runs. Mike hit none during his 2nd season (which was his final season) though.

  11. jonnylacomb Says:

    Albert Pujols had between 590 and 592 At Bats each of his first 5 seasons.

  12. whiz Says:

    cboone 21, the Dunn streak is amazing. Statistically speaking, it's a lot less likely to hit 40 HR four years in a row than 2 HR (or one) four years in a row, basically because the probability distribution is much broader around 40 than around 2.

    I estimate the odds against hitting the same number of HR four years in a row are about 8000 to 1 if you average 40 HR per year, but only 80 to 1 if you average 2 HR per year (assuming equal PA each season). And it's only about 25 to 1 against doing it if you average 1 HR per year (that includes a zero HR streak -- if you restrict it to nonzero numbers, it's 50 to 1).

    Considering only a little more than 200 players have actually hit 35 or more HR, the Dunn streak is a little spooky. Although if you consider that each player had maybe ten chances at it while in their prime, it's not as far-fetched (but still unlikely).

    BTW, the chances of Dunn extending the streak to 5 years are about 1 in 16.

    jonnylacomb, I estimate the odds against Pujols' feat (5 years in a row with PA in a range of 2) at more than 125,000 to 1! But of course a lot more players have a chance to do that (2300+ have had 500 or more PA in at least one season).

  13. sprtfrk Says:

    In both 1996 and 97, Vinny Castilla hit .304 with 40 HR and 113 RBI's

  14. Moorheadman Says:

    Dwight Evans
    I always thought it was weird or coincidental that Dwight Evans had three steals nine times in his career - and five consecutive years at one stretch. And Lloyd Moseby began his career with nine HRs for the first three years, and 18 HRs for each of the next three years. The "model of consistency" may go to Eddie Murray or Steve Garvey, though. Or perhaps Pete Rose. Their overall stats stayed basically the same for years on end.