The term walk-off was originally coined by pitcher Dennis Eckersley to describe game-ending home runs that were so deep, you didn’t have to look at them as a pitcher.
In baseball, a walk-off home run is a home run that ends the game. For a home run to end the game, it must be hit in the bottom of the final inning of the game and generate enough runs to exceed the opponent’s score.
A walk-off home run occurs when the home team hits a home run in the bottom half of the last inning, and that home run wins the game. It’s called a walk-off homerun because this type of homerun ends the game and the home team is able to walk off the field with a victory.
Most of these game-winning hits come in the form of a walk-off home run or single. Walk-off doubles are rarer and game-ending triples are exceptionally rare (there were none in 2019). Any walk-off hit that isn’t a walk-off home run needs a runner on base to score the winning run.
Records[edit]
Jim Thome holds the MLB record with 13 career walk-off homers. Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle, Jimmie Foxx, Stan Musial and Frank Robinson shared the record at 12 before Thome surpassed them. Mantle also hit one in the postseason, and Thome hit none. Musial also hit one in an All-Star Game.
In baseball, a walk-off home run is a home run which ends the game. It must be a home run that gives the home team the lead in the bottom of the final inning of the game - either the ninth inning, any extra inning, or any other regularly-scheduled final inning.
JERRY HOWARTH One of the best pieces of trivia that came out of that: Only two World Series have ended with a walk-off home run. Bill Mazeroski for Pittsburgh in 1960 at Forbes Field to win Game 7 against the Yankees 10–9, and Joe Carter 33 years later against the Philadelphia Phillies.
How many walk-off home runs does Aaron Judge have this season? Aaron Judge has had three walk-off home runs this season, most recently on July 28 against the Royals.
1: Lou Gehrig. The “Iron Horse” was one of the most clutch hitters in the history of the game, and as impressive as his regular season stats were, he was just as good in the World Series. Gehrig put together two of the best World Series performances of all time, hitting . 545 BA, four HR, nine RBI in 1928 and .
A walk-off triple (one that ends a game) occurs very infrequently. In general, game-winning hits with a runner on first base are walk-off doubles, since it is quite common for runners starting on first base to score on a double (as it is to make it from first to third on a single).
A hit by pitch is not counted statistically as a walk, though the effect is mostly the same, with the batter receiving a free pass to first base. One exception is that on a HBP (hit-by-pitch), the ball is dead.
an event in a sporting event where the game-winning score immediately ends the game, such as a walk-off home run in baseball, a touchdown or field goal that’s scored when there’s no time left on the clock or during the overtime period, or a golden goal scored in sudden death in any sport.
If a batter-runner is incapacitated during a home run (or any other play where he is entitled to a particular base, such as a walk, a ground rule double, or a ball thrown into the dugout), then his team may use a substitute runner (who then takes his place in the batting order and on the field, unless further replaced) …
After the batter who hit in the game-winning run has touched first base, they can simply just “walk-off” the field, since the team has now officially won the game. They are not required to touch any of the other bases.
Yes, the home team certainly can win by more than one run. For an example, see Royals vs Tigers on 2019-05-05: the score was tied at 2 after nine innings, the Royals didn’t score in the top of the tenth, but then in the bottom of the 9th Brandon Dixon hit a three-run home to win the game 5-2.
Five home runs in a game has been achieved four times: Pete Schneider (1923), Lou Frierson (1934), Cecil Dunn (1936) and Dick Lane (1948). In the pre-professional era, Lipman Pike also hit five home runs in 1866.
Tony Lazzeri was the first player to hit two grand slams in a single game, doing so for the New York Yankees against the Philadelphia Athletics on May 24, 1936.Players.
Player | Name of the player |
---|---|
Score | Final score of the game, with the player’s team score listed first |
A balk occurs when a pitcher makes an illegal motion on the mound that the umpire deems to be deceitful to the runner(s). As a result, any men on base are awarded the next base, and the pitch (if it was thrown in the first place) is waved off for a dead ball.
A walk (or base on balls) occurs when a pitcher throws four pitches out of the strike zone, none of which are swung at by the hitter. After refraining from swinging at four pitches out of the zone, the batter is awarded first base. In the scorebook, a walk is denoted by the letters BB.
Definition. A “walk-off” is any offensive play that gives the home team the lead – and thus, the win – in the bottom of the last inning.
When a baseball player hits the ball, he must run to each base – in order – and touch it with his foot. It is the only way to score a point. If the player hits the ball and fails to touch all the bases, the point will not be counted.
A select group of players actually got to live out that fantasy on baseball’s biggest stage. There have been nine title-clinching walk-off hits in World Series history, all coming in the past century.
With a 430-foot blast to lead off the ninth inning of Tuesday’s game against the Pittsburgh Pirates, Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge hit his 60th of the year, adding yet another memorable moment to one of the greatest offensive seasons ever.
Most Home Runs in One Season Up to 2006—45 or More
HR | Player/Team | Year |
---|---|---|
73 | Barry Bonds, San Francisco (N.L.) | 2001 |
70 | Mark McGwire, St. Louis (N.L.) | 1998 |
66 | Sammy Sosa, Chicago (N.L.) | 1998 |
65 | Mark McGwire, St. Louis (N.L.) | 1999 |
That suspicion was at its strongest in 2001 when, at 36, Bonds shattered the single-season home run record, crushing his 71st home run to surpass Mark McGwire’s 70 from 1998. He went on to finish the year with 73. McGwire has admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs.