Game Notes – 09/04/2025

On September 25, 1964, Angels right-hander Dean Chance claimed his 20th win of the year, but it wasn’t easy, as his Halos scored their only run in the bottom of the eighth.  Given a lead, at last, Chance then retired Harmon Killebrew on a flyball to right, got Jimmie Hall to pop out in foul territory and then completed the effort by inducing Don Mincher to fly out to left.  Chance had his milestone win, his Major League-leading 11th shutout of the season, his fifth coming in a 1-0 affair.  No pitcher since has started and completed more 1-0 wins in a season, the capstone to a year in which the 23-year-old finished with a 1.65 ERA and took home the Cy Young Award.  Since then, only two pitchers so young have completed a qualified season with an ERA coming in below two, a statement that might have to be revised in a few more weeks.  



Paul Skenes swam through six scoreless innings on the way toward recording his 10th win of the year, as the Pirates downed the Dodgers, 5-3.  With this latest expression of his skill, the right-hander got his ERA for the season down to 1.98 in 173.0 innings.  If the year were to be done, here’s how Skenes’ ERA and ERA+ would look historically …

 

~In the Liveball Era, there are 748 NL/AL pitchers who authored an age-23 or younger season with enough innings to qualify for an ERA title.  Here’s the quintet with the lowest ERAs, with Skenes in 2025 thrown into the mix.  

 

1.53    Dwight Gooden in 1985

1.65    Dean Chance in 1964

1.82    Vida Blue in 1971

1.98    Paul Skenes in 2025

2.05    Stan Bahnsen in 1968

2.05    Dave Righetti in 1981



~Since 1893, there are 1,039 NL/AL pitchers who authored an age-23 or younger season with enough innings to qualify for an ERA title.  Here’s the quintet with the best ERA+ numbers, with Skenes in 2025 thrown into the mix.  

 

279    Dutch Leonard in 1914

229    Dwight Gooden in 1985

218    Paul Skenes in 2025

209    Ed Reulbach in 1905

200    Dean Chance in 1964

188    Amos Rusie in 1894



Bobby Witt, Jr. and Salvador Perez contributed home runs to the Royals’ cause in a 4-3 win.  

 

~Witt has 281 extra-base hits in his career, an eye-popping accumulation when considered against the backdrop of all players through their first four seasons.  There are nine who had more, a list of (mostly) all-time names, all of whom primarily occupied outfield or corner infield positions.  Here’s the top 10:

 

358    Albert Pujols (first base, third base, outfield)

329    Joe DiMaggio (outfield)

314    Ted Williams (outfield)

305    Chuck Klein (outfield)

300    Mark Teixeira (first base, third base, outfield)

297    Ryan Braun (third base, outfield)

295    Earl Averill (outfield)

292    Johnny Mize (first base, outfield)

282    Paul Waner (outfield, first base)

281    Bobby Witt, Jr. (shortstop, third base)



~Perez’s blast moved him into sole possession of third place on the lifetime extra-base hit list for the Royals, with 626:  one ahead of Frank White and now 55 behind Hal McRae.  The 35-year-old catcher has 57 extra-base hits this season – backstops this old hardly ever reach this height.  

 

Most Extra-Base Hits in an Age-35 or Older Season, 50+% of Games at Catcher

63    Jorge Posada (42 doubles, 1 triple, 20 HR) in his age-36 season in 2007

61    Carlton Fisk (23 doubles, 1 triple, 37 HR) in his age-37 season in 1985

57    Salvador Perez (33 doubles, 24 HR) in his age-35 season in 2025



A couple of freshman infielders – Chicago’s Colson Montgomery (HR, 3 R, 3 RBI) and Minnesota’s Luke Keaschall (4-for-5) played starring roles in a White Sox win over the Twins.  

 

~Montgomery has played in 50 games this year and yet, has managed 17 home runs – an historically high tally even with the limited number of contests.  

 

Most HRs by a SS (50+% of Games at SS) in Debut Seasons

27    Trevor Story (2016) in 372 at-bats

25    Paul DeJong (2017) in 417 at-bats

22    Carlos Correa (2015) in 387 at-bats

22    Fernando Tatis, Jr. (2019) in 334 at-bats

22    Jeremy Peña (2022) in 521 at-bats

21    Anthony Volpe (2023) in 541 at-bats

20    Bobby Witt, Jr. (2022) in 591 at-bats

17    Aledmys Díaz (2016) in 404 at-bats

17    Colson Montgomery (2025) in 181 at-bats



~Keaschall’s time on the diamond has been even more contracted, with 33 games equating to 141 plate appearances.  Still, the second baseman now owns a .328/.418/.508 line.  Looking at all leagues except for the National Association, the records offer 28* players who posted a .300/.400/.500 line in their debut season, minimum 150 plate appearances.  Here’s the entire list, broken down by which league (although we’re corralling all of the different Negro Leagues into one) witnessed the initial burst:

 

AA:      Pete Browning (1882)

 

NL:      Mike Grady (1894), Ducky Holmes (1895), Jimmy Williams (1899), Paul Waner (1926), George                         Watkins (1930), Johnny Mize (1936), Bill Salkeld (1945), Willie McCovey (1959), Bret Barberie (1991),             Erubiel Durazo (1999), Albert Pujols (2001), Austin Kearns (2002)

 

AL:      Tommy Henrich (1937), Charlie Keller (1939), Ted Williams (1939), Mitchell Page (1977),   Frank                     Thomas (1990), Yordan Alvarez (2019)

 

NeL:   Oscar Charleston (1920), Jimmie Lyons (1920), Cristóbal Torriente (1920), Turkey Stearnes (1923),                  Jud  Wilson (1923), Roy Parnell (1927), Leroy Morney (1932), Buck Leonard (1935), Willard Brown                  (1937) 



*In 2025, the Athletics’ Nick Kurtz is riding a .308/.401/.636 line over 400 plate appearances into the final weeks of his freshman year 



Trent Grisham’s 30th home run of the season aided the Yankees in an 8-4 win over the Astros.   Grisham’s milestone longball gave this 2025 Yankees club a pair of outfielders (as defined by a player having at least half of his games in an outfield spot) with 30 bombs, alongside Aaron Judge and his 43.  There are a few other instances of this happening for the Bronx Bombers, including an historic year in 1941 when three made the grade*.

 

Multiple Yankees Outfielders with 30+ HR in a Season

1941    Charlie Keller (33), Tommy Henrich (31), Joe DiMaggio (30)

1960    Mickey Mantle (40), Roger Maris (39)

1961    Roger Maris (61), Mickey Mantle (54)

1962    Roger Maris (33), Mickey Mantle (30)

2004    Gary Sheffield (36), Hideki Matsui (31)

2024    Aaron Judge (58), Juan Soto (41)

2025    Aaron Judge (43), Trent Grisham (30)

 

*The 1963 Twins would match this heretofore unmatched feat, when Harmon Killebrew hit 45, Bob Allison added 35 and Jimmie Hall had 33.   




Carlos Rodón gave up a pair of runs on three hits and two walks in six innings and came away the winner for his 16th victory of the year.  

 

~Rodón is tied with Milwaukee’s Freddy Peralta for the big league lead with 16 wins.  A Yankees southpaw last paced the Majors in victories in 2010, when CC Sabathia tied for the lead with 21.  The others to do this:

 

2009    CC Sabathia (19)

1994    Jimmy Key (17)

1978    Ron Guidry (25)

1961    Whitey Ford (25)



~Rodón also paces the Majors with 6.0 hits allowed per nine innings.  Qualified portsiders rarely have gotten so low.  When they did, it looked like this.

 

1914    Dutch Leonard with a 5.6

1949    Tommy Byrne with a 5.7

1956    Herb Score with a 5.8

1963    Al Downing with a 5.8

1965    Sandy Koufax with a 5.8

1965    Sam McDowell with a 5.9

1966    Sam McDowell with a 6.0

1968    Dave McNally with a 5.8

1971    Vida Blue with a 6.0

1985    Sid Fernandez with a 5.7

2018    Blake Snell with a 5.6

2023    Blake Snell with a 5.8



Ranger Suárez (6.0 IP, 6 H) and three Phillies relievers combined on a seven-hitter and Philadelphia notched its 12th shutout of the year, a 2-0 win against Milwaukee.  Philadelphia’s starters have a collective 3.55 ERA, which would be the lowest for the franchise since the 2011 staff – mostly steered by Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, Roy Oswalt and Vance Worley – posted a 2.86 (that 2.86 is the lowest for the team in the Liveball Era).



Ryan Pepiot went the first five for the Rays in a win, emerging from his stint with no hits allowed.  The right-hander is on quite a tear, having surrendered a total of two hits over his past three starts (one in each of his previous two, both of which ended with five innings pitched).  He and Dylan Cease (2024) are the only pitchers in the Modern Era to have a three-start streak featuring at least five innings and no more than one hit allowed.  Last season, Cease allowed one hit over six, followed that with one hit over seven and completed the trifecta with a no-hitter.  



José Ramírez connected on his 282nd career longball in a 2-for-4 day at the plate.  The 32-year-old switch-hitter is now at 713 career extra-base hits and 2,961 career total bases.  Among switch-hitters through age-32 seasons, his standing in all three of these counting categories offers a seat at the top-10 table.  



Switch-Hitters, Most Home Runs Through an Age-32 Season

454    Mickey Mantle

338    Mark Teixeira

333    Eddie Murray

310    Chipper Jones

288    Lance Berkman

282    José Ramírez

 

Switch-Hitters, Most Extra-Base Hits Through an Age-32 Season

812    Mickey Mantle

713    José Ramírez

711    Mark Teixeira

709    Eddie Murray

677    Carlos Beltrán

662    Chipper Jones

 

Switch-Hitters, Most Total Bases Through an Age-32 Season

3,805    Mickey Mantle

3,421    Eddie Murray

3,238    Roberto Alomar

3,014    Chipper Jones

3,012    Ted Simmons

3,011    Pete Rose

2,992    Carlos Beltrán

2,985    Mark Teixeira

2,964    Jimmy Rollins

2,961    José Ramírez

 

 

 

Thanks to Baseball Reference and its extraordinary research database, Stathead, for help in assembling this piece.

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Roger Schlueter

As Sr. Editorial Director for Major League Baseball Productions from 2004-2015, Roger served as a hub for hundreds of hours of films, series, documentaries and features: as researcher, fact-checker, script doctor, and developer of ideas. The years at MLB Production gave him the ideal platform to pursue what galvanized him the most – the idea that so much of what takes place on the field during the MLB regular and postseason (and is forever beautifully condensed into a box score) has connections to what has come before. Unearthing and celebrating these webs allows baseball to thrive, for the present can come alive and also reignite the past.