Cody Bellinger of the New York Yankees celebrates after hitting a home run in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium. / Mike Stobe / Getty Images
The New York Yankees nearly made MLB history on March 29 in their second game of the 2025 season.
In a 20–9 rout of the Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium, New York hammered nine home runs, including three from two-time AL MVP Aaron Judge. The Yankees started the ballgame with a bang, hitting three homers on the first three pitches they saw, and the bats didn’t quiet down the rest of the afternoon.
So, how close did the Yankees come to making history in that game? Let’s take a look:
The all-time record for homers hit in a single game (since 1901) is 10—set by the Toronto Blue Jays in an 18–3 win on Sept. 14, 1987. Ernie Whitt blasted three dingers himself that game, and teammates Rance Mulliniks and George Bell knocked two bombs apiece.
With Oswald Peraza’s two-run shot in the seventh inning, the Yankees became just the third team in MLB history to mash at least nine homers in one game.
The only other team in MLB history to hit more than eight homers in a single game is the 1999 Cincinnati Reds, who pummeled nine long balls in a blowout win over the Phillies on Sept. 4 of that year.
Thirty other teams have hit eight homers in a single game, most recently the Oakland Athletics in an 18–3 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on July 14, 2024.
TEAM
DATE
HOMERS
FINAL SCORE
Blue Jays
Sept. 14, 1987
10
Toronto 18, Baltimore 3
Reds
Sept. 4, 1999
9
Cincinnati 22, Philadelphia 3
Yankees
March 29, 2025
9
New York 20, Milwaukee 9
30 teams
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8
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Published 1 Hour Ago|Modified 3:07 PM EDT