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Most career HR through Age 29 season

Posted by Andy on June 8, 2009

Here are the current leaders for most career HR through Age 29 season (Age as calculated by Baseball-Reference.com, which is calculated on June 30th of each season.)

  Cnt Player             **HR** From  To   Ages   G    PA    AB    R    H   2B  3B  RBI  BB  IBB  SO  HBP  SH  SF GDP  SB   CS   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS  Positions Teams
+----+-----------------+-------+----+----+-----+----+-----+-----+----+----+---+---+----+----+---+----+---+---+---+---+----+---+-----+-----+-----+-----+---------+-----------+
    1 Alex Rodriguez      429   1994 2005 18-29 1592  7100  6195 1245 1901 338  25 1226  730  51 1265  98  16  61 136  226  56  .307  .385  .577  .962 *65/D     SEA-TEX-NYY 
    2 Ken Griffey         398   1989 1999 19-29 1535  6688  5832 1063 1742 320  30 1152  747 170  984  47   6  56 109  167  60  .299  .380  .569  .949 *8/D379   SEA         
    3 Jimmie Foxx         379   1925 1937 17-29 1561  6605  5551 1216 1852 313  93 1345  985   0  859   9  60   0   0   71  53  .334  .435  .628 1.063 *35/2796  PHA-BOS     
    4 Mickey Mantle       374   1951 1961 19-29 1552  6699  5519 1245 1700 241  66 1063 1129  69 1136  10  13  28  57  124  29  .308  .425  .579 1.004 *89/645   NYY         
    5 Eddie Mathews       370   1952 1961 20-29 1482  6482  5466 1032 1548 223  55  992  930  55  886  16  31  39  72   55  26  .283  .387  .547  .934 *5/7      BSN-MLN     
    6 Andruw Jones        342   1996 2006 19-29 1607  6617  5836  962 1556 303  32 1023  647  61 1256  75   6  53 143  133  53  .267  .345  .505  .850 *89/D7    ATL         
    7 Hank Aaron          342   1954 1963 20-29 1511  6582  5940 1077 1898 321  77 1121  541 124  609  20  19  62 156  103  37  .320  .375  .572  .947 *987/453  MLN         
    8 Mel Ott             342   1926 1938 17-29 1739  7294  6148 1247 1939 336  61 1306 1035   0  516  37  74   0  44   60   0  .315  .417  .557  .974 *958/74   NYG         
    9 Juan Gonzalez       340   1989 1999 19-29 1248  5283  4831  791 1421 282  19 1075  344  63  947  48   2  58 129   21  15  .294  .343  .572  .915 97D8      TEX         
   10 Albert Pujols       337   2001 2009 21-29 1295  5626  4770  991 1595 355  13 1028  740 172  526  63   1  52 165   52  28  .334  .426  .626 1.052 *37/59D64 STL         

Albert Pujols is #10, but he's in his Age 29 season right now and doesn't turn 30 until January of next year. He's on a torrid pace this year but if he finishes with just his average number of homers will get "only" 24 more this year for a total of 42. Still that would give him 361 HR through his Age 29 season and bump him up to 6th on this list.

Alex Rodriguez and Ken Griffey both got out to extremely fast starts in the first half of their careers. Injuries and now old age have spoiled the second half of Griffey's career and time has yet to tell on A-rod.

My gut tells me that in the end, Pujols will pass both those guys in career HR and career reputation. But we'll need 7-10 more years to find out about that.

8 Responses to “Most career HR through Age 29 season”

  1. ZimJim Says:

    I think we are already seeing the passing of the torch on career reputation. Pujols was having Triple crown worthy seasons year in and year out for the first part of his career while he played in the shadows of bonds and arod. Since bonds and now recently arod have fallen from grace due their steroid use, mlb has looked to pujols as the games most feared hitter. He gets all the headlines, hes entering his prime, and has his own competition at the all star game this year.

  2. spudart Says:

    Something tells me Albert Pujols is 33 years old.

  3. ollie1000 Says:

    I agree on Pujols' age. I remember seeing him when he was "23" and thought he looked 30 then. He still may end up with astonishing career numbers...

  4. JohnnyTwisto Says:

    "Entering his prime"? I think he did that about 8 years ago.

  5. Andy Says:

    I disagree, Zimjim, about career perception. Griffey and A-rod were the same way at the same point in their careers--they were each the best player in baseball, and perceived as perhaps the best player in a generation, and also perceived as likely to break then then-record for career HR. Is Pujols going to pass 750 HR? Right now it would seem so, but he's not even halfway there yet. I think it will be at least another 4 years before he could be properly perceived as having had a better career than Griffey.

  6. JP Caillault Says:

    Let's say Pujols finishes this season with the 51 HRs he's on pace to hit, giving him his greatest HR season to date. That would give him 370 for his fantastic 9-year career. But even if he repeats in the next 9 years the incredible numbers he's put up from 2001-2009, that'd still "only" be 740 HRs. And what're the odds that he'll HAVE another 9-year run like he's already had? So, chance of passing Aaron or Bonds - small. As for passing a very-close-to-being-finished Griffey - pretty likely. Chance of passing ARod, who, given the new Yankee Stadium, should easily become the new career HR leader - very, very tiny.

  7. TheGoof Says:

    Note that most of those guys fell well below 600 HR or are expected to. A-Rod still hasn't gotten there yet, and anything can happen. Griffey got there limping. Which leaves Hank Aaron -- considered at that age LEAST likely of these guys to hit 600. No one even thought about it, while Mantle and Mathews were seen as megastars. So Pujols has his work cut out for him, as JP's math points out. What he does have working for him is that, like Hank Aaron, he's been overshadowed early in his career and has had the consistency and injury-resistance of Hammerin' Hank. He even plays a position with less wear and tear. So I wouldn't be surprised if he hits 600 or 700, but it's way too early to tell. A decade ago, everyone thought Griffey would hit 700. A few years ago, nobody thought Griffey would make it to 600.

  8. JDV Says:

    The actual birthdays don't change the numbers much, as eight of the ten had off-season birthdays. A-Rod had 20 fewer (409) on his 30th, but still heads the list. Andruw Jones nudges ahead of Aaron and Ott with 345. As stated, Pujols still has the rest of this season to move up from 10th to, perhaps, 6th.