List of Major League Baseball triples records
There are various Major League Baseball records for triples.
175 career triples
Player | Triples[1] | Teams & Seasons |
Sam Crawford | 309 | 1899–1902 Cincinnati; 1903–17 Detroit |
Ty Cobb | 297 | 1905–26 Detroit; 1927–28 Philadelphia (AL) |
Honus Wagner | 252 | 1897–99 Louisville; 1900–17 Pittsburgh |
Jake Beckley | 2431 | 1888–89, 1891–96 Pittsburgh; 1890 Pittsburgh (PL); 1896–97 New York (NL); 1897–1903 Cincinnati; 1904–07 St. Louis (NL) |
Roger Connor | 233 | 1880–82 Troy (NL); 1883–91, 1893–94 New York (NL); 1892 Philadelphia (NL); 1894–97 St. Louis (NL) |
Tris Speaker | 222 | 1907–15 Boston (AL); 1916–26 Cleveland, 1927 Washington; 1928 Philadelphia (AL) |
Dan Brouthers | 2052 | 1879–80 Troy (NL); 1881–85 Buffalo (NL); 1886–88 Detroit (NL); Boston (NL); 1890–91 Boston (PL-AA); Brooklyn; 1894–95 Baltimore (NL); 1895 Louisville (NL); 1896 Philadelphia (NL); 1904 New York (NL) |
Joe Kelley | 194 | 1891, 1908 Boston (NL); 1892 Pittsburgh; 1892–98 Baltimore (NL); 1899–1901 Brooklyn; 1902 Baltimore (AL); 1902–06 Cincinnati |
Paul Waner | 191 | 1926–40 Pittsburgh; 1941–44 Boston (NL); 1941 Brooklyn; 1944–45 New York (AL) |
Bid McPhee | 1883 | 1882–89 Cincinnati (AA); 1890–99 Cincinnati (NL) |
Eddie Collins | 187 | 1906–14, 1927–30 Philadelphia (AL), 1915–26 Chicago (AL) |
Ed Delahanty | 1854 | 1888–89, 1891–1901 Philadelphia (NL); 1890 Cleveland (PL); 1902–03 Washington (AL) |
Sam Rice | 184 | 1915–33 Washington (AL); 1934 Cleveland |
Jesse Burkett | 182 | 1890 New York (NL); 1891–98 Cleveland (NL); 1899–1901 St. Louis (NL); 1902–04 St. Louis (AL); 1905 Boston (AL) |
Ed Konetchy | 1825 | 1907–13 St. Louis (NL); 1914 Pittsburgh; 15 Pittsburgh (FL); 1916–18 Boston (NL); 1919–21 Brooklyn; 1921 Philadelphia (NL) |
Edd Roush | 1826 | 1913 Chicago (AL); 1914–15 Indianapolis/Newark (FL); 1916, 1927–29 New York (NL); 1916–26, 1931 Cincinnati |
Buck Ewing | 178 | 1880–82 Troy (NL); 1883–92 New York (NL); 1893–94 Cleveland (NL); 1895–97 Cincinnati |
Rabbit Maranville | 177 | 1912–20, 1929–33, 1935 Boston (NL); 1921–24 Pittsburgh; 1925 Chicago (NL); 1926 Brooklyn; 1927–28 St. Louis (NL) |
Stan Musial | 177 | 1941–44, 1946–63 St. Louis (NL) |
Closest active players
There are no active players that are considered close to realistically reaching 175 career triples.
Active players with 100 or more career triples (as of September 18, 2016):[2]
Top 10 in career triples, 1920–present
Player | Triples[3] | Teams & Seasons |
Paul Waner | 191 | 1926–40 Pittsburgh Pirates, 1941–44 Boston Braves, 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers, 1944–45 New York Yankees |
Stan Musial | 177 | 1941–44, 1946–63 St. Louis Cardinals |
Goose Goslin | 173 | 1921–30, 1933, 1938 Washington Senators, 1930–32 St. Louis Browns, 1934–37 Detroit Tigers |
Roberto Clemente | 166 | 1955–72 Pittsburgh |
Sam Rice | 165 | 1915–33 Washington Senators, 1934 Cleveland Indians |
Pie Traynor | 164 | 1920–35, 1937 Pittsburgh |
Lou Gehrig | 163 | 1923–39 New York (AL) |
Heinie Manush | 160 | 1923–27 Detroit; 1928–30 St. Louis (AL); 1930–35 Washington (AL); 1936 Boston (AL); 1937–38 Brooklyn; 1938–39 Pittsburgh |
Kiki Cuyler | 157 | 1921–27 Pittsburgh; 1928–35 Chicago (NL); 1935–37 Cincinnati; 38 Brooklyn |
Earle Combs | 154 | 1924–35 New York (AL) |
Top 10 career triples by league
American League Player | Triples | National League Player | Triples |
Ty Cobb | 297 | Honus Wagner | 252 |
Sam Crawford | 249 | Roger Connor | 233 |
Tris Speaker | 222 | Jake Beckley | 221 |
Eddie Collins | 187 | Fred Clarke | 220 |
Sam Rice | 184 | Joe Kelley | 194 |
Goose Goslin | 177[4] | Paul Waner | 191 |
Joe Jackson | 168[5] | Buck Ewing | 178 |
Lou Gehrig | 163[6] | Dan Brouthers | 177 |
Joe Judge | 158[7] | Rabbit Maranville | 177 |
Earle Combs | 154[8] | Stan Musial | 177 |
25 triples in one season
Evolution of the single season record for triples
Three or more seasons with 20 triples
Six or more seasons with 15 triples
Player | Years | Seasons & Teams |
Sam Crawford | 13 | 1900–02 Cincinnati; 1903–04, 1906–08, 1910, 1912–15 Detroit |
Roger Connor | 9 | 1882 Troy (NL); 1883, 1885–90 New York (NL); 1894 St. Louis (NL) |
Dan Brouthers | 7 | 1883–84 Buffalo (NL); 1886–87 Detroit (NL); 1891 Boston (AA); 1892 Brooklyn; 1894 Baltimore (NL) |
Jake Beckley[18] | 7 | 1890 Pittsburgh (PL); 1891–95 Pittsburgh; 1899 Cincinnati |
Elmer Flick[18] | 7 | 1900–01 Philadelphia (NL); 1903–07 Cleveland |
Honus Wagner[19] | 7 | 1900, 1902–03, 1908, 1911–12, 1915 Pittsburgh |
Ty Cobb | 7 | 1908, 1911–13, 1917, 1921–22 Detroit |
Paul Waner[20] | 7 | 1926–30, 1933–34 Pittsburgh |
Joe Kelley[21] | 6 | 1893–96, 1898 Baltimore (NL); 1900 Brooklyn |
Ed Delahanty[22] | 6 | 1892–94, 1896–97, 1901 Philadelphia (NL) |
Joe Jackson | 6 | 1911–13 Cleveland; 1916–17, 1920 Chicago (AL) |
Four or more consecutive seasons with 15 triples
Twelve or more seasons with 10 triples
Player | Years | Seasons & Teams |
Sam Crawford | 17 | 1900–02 Cincinnati; 1903–16 Detroit |
Ty Cobb | 17 | 1907–19, 1921–22, 1924–25 Detroit |
Jake Beckley | 14 | 1889, 1891–95 Pittsburgh; 1890 Pittsburgh (PL); 1897 New York (NL)–Cincinnati; 1898–1901, 1903 Cincinnati; 1905 St. Louis (NL) |
Fred Clarke[26] | 14 | 1896–98 Louisville (NL); 1900–09, 1911 Pittsburgh |
Honus Wagner | 13 | 1899 Louisville (NL); 1900–05, 1907–09, 1911–12, 1915 Pittsburgh |
Tris Speaker | 13 | 1909–15 Boston (AL); 1917–21, 1923 Cleveland |
Eddie Collins | 12 | 1909–14 Philadelphia (AL); 1915–17, 1920–22 Chicago (AL) |
Eight or more consecutive seasons with 10 triples
League leader in triples
League leader in triples 4 or more seasons
Player | Titles[31] | Seasons & Teams |
Sam Crawford | 6 | 1902 Cincinnati; 1903, 1910, 1913–15 Detroit |
Stan Musial | 5 | 1943, 1946, 1948–49, 1951 St. Louis-NL |
Willie Wilson | 5 | 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987–88 Kansas City |
Lance Johnson | 5 | 1991–94 Chicago (AL); 1996 New York (NL) |
Harry Stovey | 4 | 1880 Worcester Brown Stockings, 1884, 1888 Philadelphia Athletics (AA), 1891 Boston Beaneaters |
Ty Cobb | 4 | 1908, 1911, 1917–18 Detroit |
Brett Butler | 4 | 1983 Atlanta; 1986 Cleveland; 1994 Los Angeles (NL); 1995 Los Angeles (NL)-New York (NL) |
Jimmy Rollins | 4 | 2001–02, 2004, 2007 Philadelphia-NL |
League leader in triples 3 or more consecutive seasons
League leader in triples in both leagues
4 triples by an individual in one game
110 triples by a team in one season
See also
Notes
- Total includes one season in the Players' League. Major League Baseball recognizes this year of service, but this is not universally recognized by all historians. He hit 22 triples that season, giving him a National League career total of 221.
- Total includes 28 triples in his two years in the Players' League and American Association, giving 177 triples in his National League career.
- Total includes 76 triples in his 8 seasons with Cincinnati while they were in the American Association, giving 112 triples in his National League career.
- Total includes 13 triples in his one year in the Players' League, giving 172 triples in his National League career.
- Total includes 18 triples in his one year in the Federal League, giving 164 triples in his National League career.
- Total includes 15 triples in his one year in the Federal League, giving 167 triples in his Major League career.
- The 1901–1903 records for a single season are included because some historians do not recognize any record set prior to the "modern era" which began in 1901.
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