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More Fun With Baseball Rarities: Two Grand Slams in One Game!

Tony Lazzeri May 24, 1936

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More Fun With Baseball Rarities:

Two Grand Slams in One Game!

I always enjoy trying to uncover rarities that occur on the baseball field. In the past, I’ve written about perfect games, unassisted triple plays, four home runs in a game, and cycles (including natural cycles and even reverse natural cycles). These are some of the rarest feats in the game.

Some of you may remember my recent post about “immaculate innings” in which I learned that only two players in baseball history have three “immaculate innings”: Sandy Koufax and Chris Sale. With only two players achieving this, you’d have to conclude it’s pretty rare.

How rare is it?

According to Baseball-Reference, there have been approximately 3.9 million innings over 145 seasons since the founding of the National League in 1876. So two divided by 3.9 million comes to .0000005. In other words, the chances of a pitcher throwing three immaculate innings in his career are five one-hundred-thousandths of one percent!

I Found Something Even Rarer!

But hold on…I think I’ve uncovered something even rarer, something that’s only happened once. Want to guess what that might be? Try two grand slams in the same inning!

That’s right… Cardinals’ third baseman Fernando Tatis, Sr. is the only player in

Fernando Tatis Senior and Junior

baseball history to have hit two grand slams in the same inning. His historic performance occurred in the third inning of a game between the Cardinals and the Dodgers played at Dodger Stadium on April 23, 1999 in front of 46,687 fans. Remarkably, he hit them off the same pitcher, the Dodgers’ Chan Ho Park. Again, using 3.9 million innings as the total innings, one occurrence comes to .0000002, or two one-hundred-thousandths of one percent!

Fernando Tatis, Sr. is the only player to hit two in one inning, but a total of 13 players have hit two in one game, making this also an extremely rare achievement. Dividing 3.9 million innings by 9.5 (to account for extra-inning games), we get approximately 410,526 games played. So two grand slams in one game happen approximately once every 31,579 games.  

The first player to do it was Tony Lazzeri on May 24, 1936 (pictured above), and the last was Josh Willingham, on July 27, 2009, 12 years ago. 

Here’s the names of all the players who have hit two grand slams in one game: Tony Lazzeri (May 24, 1936), Jim Tabor (July 4, 1939), Rudy York (July 27, 1946), Jim Gentile (May 9, 1961), Tony Cloninger (July 3, 1966), Jim Northrup (June 24, 1968), Frank Robinson (June 26, 1970), Robin Ventura (September 4, 1995), Chris Hoiles (August 14, 1998), Fernando Tatis (April 23, 1999), Nomar Garciaparra (May 10, 1999), Bill Mueller (July 29, 2003), Josh Willingham (July 27, 2009).  

Some Interesting Trivia About Two Grand Slams In One Game

Since we’re all baseball fans, that means we enjoy useless trivia…so take a guess what I have for you here:

To read more about just how rare this feat of hitting two grand slams in the same inning is, here’s an article by Andrew Simon from MLB.com that talks about it.

I think we can all agree that hitting two grand slams in a single game is a baseball oddity, but hitting two in one inning maybe baseball’s rarest feat of all!

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from Two Grand Slams in a Game Wikipedia page; and from article by Andrew Simon

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