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Brother Buzz

(38,030 posts)
Fri Mar 29, 2019, 11:01 PM Mar 2019

Two MLB grand slams in the same inning! Unpossible?

I'm watching the Giants Padres game and they were talking about the Padres newest, hottest 20 year old rookie, Fernando Tatís Jr (batting .750), and mentioned his father's extraordinary batting record. I was convinced they meant two grand slams in the same game and had to look it up.

Fernando Tatís became the only player to hit two grand slams in the same inning, when he attained the milestone, slugging two in the third inning for the St. Louis Cardinals on April 23, 1999. In achieving the feat, he also set a new major league record with eight runs batted in in a single inning. Thirteen players have hit two grand slams in a single Major League Baseball (MLB) game to date. No player has accomplished the feat more than once in his career and no player has ever hit more than two in a game.



Damn!


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Major_League_Baseball_single-game_grand_slam_leaders


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Two MLB grand slams in the same inning! Unpossible? (Original Post) Brother Buzz Mar 2019 OP
Baseball!!!!! that is all n/t luvallpeeps Mar 2019 #1
The Boys of Summer are back! Laffy Kat Mar 2019 #2
The battered Bastard of Baseball Brother Buzz Mar 2019 #3
i remember that game. been a cards fan since i was a wee lad. Kurt V. Mar 2019 #4

Brother Buzz

(38,030 posts)
3. The battered Bastard of Baseball
Sat Mar 30, 2019, 01:01 AM
Mar 2019

They put the balls back in the game

The Battered Bastards of Baseball is one of baseball's last great, unheralded true stories. In 1973, Hollywood veteran Bing Russell (best known for playing Deputy Clem on Bonanza) created the only independent baseball team in America at the time, the legendary Portland Mavericks. Bing operated without a Major League affiliation while playing in a city that was considered a wasteland for professional baseball. Tryouts for the Mavericks, which were open to the public, were filled with hopefuls who arrived in droves from every state in America, many of whom had been rejected by organized baseball. Skeptics agreed it would never work. But Bing's Mavericks generated unprecedented success: they shattered attendance records, signed Kurt Russell - Bing's son - as a player and team Vice President, produced the most successful batboy in baseball (filmmaker Todd Field), re-launched the controversial career of Jim Bouton, hired the first female general manager in Baseball, and inspired one of America's beloved bubblegums - Big League Chew. The Battered Bastards of Baseball is as much about the independent spirit as it is about baseball. The Mavericks' in your face attitude was contagious to fans, and during their short reign, they - and Bing Russell - basically held up their middle finger to the sports establishment and said we're playing this game on our terms, not yours. They were the real life Bad News Bears.

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