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MLB teams combine to set never-before-seen HR record

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Baseball fans who love the long ball had plenty to cheer about Tuesday.

A day of historic home runs included rookie sensation Shoehei Ohtani’s first major league blastChristian Villanueva’s historic three-homer game and Didi Gregorius’s two homers and eight RBIs in the Yankees’ home opener.

Lost in the excitement over those shots was another home run feat — one that had never happened in MLB history.

In the Brewers-Cardinals game at Miller Park, Dexter Fowler went deep on the first pitch for St. Louis against Chase Anderson. Two pitches later, Tommy Pham did the same, giving the Cards an early lead.

St. Louis was ahead 4-3 in the bottom of the ninth when Milwaukee’s Christian Yelich and Ryan Braun echoed Fowler and Pham’s feat. Their home runs on back-to-back pitches from Dominic Leone gave the Brewers a 5-4 victory Tuesday night.

According to MLB.com, it was the first game in major league history to begin and end with consecutive home runs.

“I’m just glad we were on the finishing end of that accomplishment,” Braun told reporters after the game. “You want to be on the back end, not the front end.”

The 34-year-old slugger has just three hits this season, but two of them are game-winning homers. Braun’s three-run shot Friday night against Padres’ All-Star closer Brad Hand capped a five-run rally in the ninth that gave the Brewers an 8-6 victory in San Diego.

But younger players stole the home run headlines Tuesday.

Ohtani’s first career home run came in his first at-bat at Angel Stadium. The 23-year-old two-way star drilled a curveball off Cleveland starter Josh Tomlin into the right-center field stands as LA beat the Indians 13-2.

Villanueva went deep three times for the Padres in an 8-4 victory over the Rockies. The 26-year-old third baseman joined Jarrett Parker and Bobby Estalella as the only players in MLB history with three-homer games in their first 14 career games.

Finally, the 28-year-old Gregorious powered the Yankees to an 11-4 win over Tampa Bay with his historic day. His eight RBIs are the most in a single game by a shortstop in team history.

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Todd Windsor is a senior story editor at The Western Journal. He has worked as an editor or reporter in news and sports for more than 30 years.
Todd Windsor is a senior story editor at The Western Journal. He was born in Baltimore and grew up in Maryland. He graduated from the University of Miami (he dreams of wearing the turnover chain) and has worked as an editor and reporter in news and sports for more than 30 years. Todd started at The Miami News (defunct) and went on to work at The News & Observer in Raleigh, N.C., the St. Petersburg (now Tampa Bay) Times, The Baltimore Sun and Space News before joining Liftable Media in 2016. He and his beautiful wife have two amazing daughters and a very old Beagle.
Birthplace
Baltimore
Education
Bachelor of Science from the University of Miami
Location
Phoenix, Arizona
Languages Spoken
English
Topics of Expertise
Politics, Media, Sports




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