Statistics in Major League Games Paul Has Attended

Paul’s Major League Baseball Stadium Stats Page

If you’re reading this, you’re doing it for one of three reasons:

1.  You are me.

2.  You are obsessed with me and my experiences at ballparks.

3.  You have reached a state of ennui so deep that no human language has come up with a word that does it justice.  Not even French.

If one of the above three do not apply to you, it’s time to go now.  Thanks for stopping by.

Here’s the plan:  I have always been curious about how my presence impacts teams and individuals.  Are there major league teams or players who should pay me to show up at their games, including airfare, nice hotel accommodations, and tickets to matinee shows before the night ballgame?  The following is set up mostly for me, so that I can keep a record book of what has happened in my presence.  I mean, I just like this stuff.  I’m even setting it up in black and white Courier type, so it looks like the newspapers I read growing up.  Plus, I figure that if I channel all of my obsessive-compulsive tendencies into this one area of my life, I can lead a rich, fulfilling, contributory existence on this planet.

I’m serious enough about this that I have picked up a Microsoft Access spreadsheet in which I have entered all stats for all games I have attended, and have input all major and minor league games I have seen.  I will update it each winter with the previous summer’s games.  So if there’s ever anything you want to know other than what is listed below, let me know.

Read on only if you dare.

On to the minutiae!

All statistics are through the 2023 season.

CAREER BATTING–INDIVIDUALS

Highest Batting Average, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 10 at-bats):

.800–Preston Wilson, Florida/St. Louis (8-10).
.667–Derek Bell, Houston/San Diego (10-15).
.667–Randall Simon, Detroit (8-12).
.600–Bobby Witt Jr., Kansas City (6-10).
.545–Wilmer Flores, New York Mets/San Francisco (6-11).
.545–Cheslor Cuthbert, Kansas City (6-11).

Highest Batting Average, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 20 at-bats):

.500–Mike Bordick, Baltimore/Oakland (13-26).
.500–Trot Nixon, Boston (10-20).
.481–Joe Randa, Kansas City/Detroit/Pittsburgh (13-27).
.450–Brad Fullmer, Anaheim/Texas/Toronto (9-20).
.448–Casey Kotchman, Anaheim/Los Angeles Angels/Seattle (13-29).

Highest Batting Average, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 80 at-bats):

.379–Dante Bichette, Colorado/Boston (33-87).
.319–Franklin Gutierrez, Cleveland/Seattle (36/113).
.318–Edgar Martinez, Seattle (88-277).
.313–Kenji Johjima, Seattle (31-99).
.309–Jose Vidro, Montreal/Washington/Seattle (25-81).

Lowest Batting Average, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 20 at-bats):

.048–Jesus Montero, Seattle (1-21).
.050–Brett Gardner, New York Yankees (1-20).
.087–Austin Kearns, Cincinnati/Washington (2-23).
.095–Brad Wilkerson, Montreal/Washington/Texas/Seattle (2-21).
.100–Ian Kinsler, Texas/Detroit (3-30).
.100–Matt Tuiasosopo, Seattle (2-20).

Lowest Career Batting Average, Paul’s Presence (minimum 80 at-bats):

.181–Dustin Ackley, Seattle (17-94).
.190–David Bell, Seattle/Philadelphia (20-105).
.205–Mike Zunino, Seattle (17-83).
.209–Nelson Cruz, Texas/Seattle (27-129).
.213–Richie Sexson, Cleveland/Milwaukee/Seattle (39-183).

Most At-Bats, Paul’s Presence, With Zero Hits:
19–Brian Dozier, Minnesota
15–Brian Giles, Cleveland/Pittsburgh/San Diego
15–Maicer Izturis, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim/Los Angeles Angels.
14–Shed Long, Jr., Seattle.
12–Adley Rutschman, Baltimore.
12–Matt Lawton, Minnesota/Cleveland/New York Yankees/Seattle.
12–Mark Teahen, Kansas City/Chicago White Sox.

Highest OPS, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 10 plate appearances):
2.425–Brandon Phillips, Cincinnati.
2.314–Welington Castillo, Arizona.
2.227–Rafael Bournigal, Seattle.
2.000–Preston Wilson, Florida/St. Louis.
1.821–Derek Bell, Houston/San Diego.

Highest OPS, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 20 plate appearances):

1.671–Carlos Delgado, Toronto/Florida/New York Mets.
1.516–Barry Bonds, San Francisco.
1.424–Gary Sheffield, Los Angeles Dodgers/New York Yankees/Detroit.
1.400–Trot Nixon, Boston.
1.400–Brad Fullmer, Anaheim/Texas/Toronto.

Highest OPS, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 80 plate appearances):

1.194–Andres Galarraga, Colorado/Texas.
1.046–Vinny Castilla, Colorado/San Diego/Washington.
1.009–Dante Bichette, Colorado/Boston.
.988–Ken Griffey, Jr., Seattle/Cincinnati.
.983–Edgar Martinez, Seattle.

Lowest OPS, Career, Paul’s Presence (minimum 20 plate appearances):

.095–Brian Dozier, Minnesota.
.139–Jesus Montero, Seattle.
.145–Brett Gardner, New York Yankees.
.205–Mark Grudzielanek, Los Angeles Dodgers/Chicago Cubs/Kansas City.
.206–Raul Mondesi, Los Angeles Dodgers/Atlanta.

Most Hits, Career, Paul’s Presence:

148–Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle/New York Yankees.
88–Edgar Martinez, Seattle.
61–Kyle Seager, Seattle.
61–Adrian Beltre, Los Angeles Dodgers/Seattle/Boston/Texas.
61–Raul Ibanez, Seattle/Kansas City/Philadelphia/New York Yankees/Los Angeles Angels.

Most Hits, Career, Paul’s Presence, Road Players Only:

19–Nick Swisher, Oakland/Chicago White Sox/New York Yankees/Cleveland.
17–Michael Young, Texas.
16–Eric Chavez, Oakland.
16–Mark Ellis, Oakland.
16–Garret Anderson, Anaheim/Los Angeles of Anaheim.
16–Mark Kotsay, Florida/San Diego/Oakland.

Most Career Hits, Active Players, where Paul Hasn’t Seen One Yet (in other words, guys I have to cross off the Seen Them Get A Hit List, numbers through 2021 season):

2135–Joey Votto (#1 overall).
1737–Manny Machado (#10 overall).
1505–Christian Yelich (#25 overall).
1461–Justin Turner (#28 overall).
1331–Marcell Ozuna (#34 overall)

Most Home Runs, Career, Paul’s Presence:

15–Ken Griffey, Jr., Seattle.
15–Edgar Martinez, Seattle.
11–Jay Buhner, Seattle.
10–Raul Ibanez, Seattle/Kansas City/New York Yankees/Los Angeles Angels.
9–Kyle Seager, Seattle.
9–Adrian Beltre, Los Angeles Dodgers/Seattle/Texas.
9–John Olerud, Seattle.

Most Home Runs, Career, Paul’s Presence, road players only:

6 (tie)–Albert Pujols, Los Angeles Angels
Carlos Delgado, Toronto/New York Mets.
3 (tie)–17 players.

Most Career Home Runs, Active Players, where Paul Hasn’t Seen One Yet (in other words, guys I have to cross off the Seen Them Homer List, numbers through 2021 season):

402–Giancarlo Stanton (#2 overall).
368–Mike Trout (#3 overall).
356–Joey Votto (#4 overall).
325–Nolan Arenado (#7 overall).
321–Freddie Freeman (#8 overall).

Most Stolen Bases, Career, Paul’s Presence:

17–Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle.
8–Alex Rodriguez, Seattle/Texas.
7–(tie) Julio Rodriguez, Seattle.
Chone Figgins, Los Angeles of Anaheim/Seattle.
Marc McLemore, Texas/Baltimore/Seattle/Oakland.

Most Stolen Bases, Career, Paul’s Presence, road players only:

5–Chone Figgins, Los Angeles of Anaheim.
4–Coco Crisp, Cleveland/Boston/Oakland.
2–(tie) 26 players.

Active career leaders in stolen bases who have yet to steal a base in my presence (in other words, those I need to cross of my See Them Steal A Base List, numbers through 2021 season):

260–Trea Turner (#5 overall).
216–Andrew McCutchen (#6 overall).
211–Jean Segura (#7 overall).
184–Christian Yelich (#11 overall).
180–Ronald Acuna, Jr. (#12 overall).

CAREER PITCHING–INDIVIDUALS

Most Wins, Career, Paul’s Presence:

10–Felix Hernandez, Seattle.
8–Jamie Moyer, Baltimore/Seattle.
6–Freddy Garcia, Seattle.
5 (tie)–James Paxton, Seattle.
–Jarrod Washburn, Los Angeles of Anaheim/Seattle.
–Randy Johnson, Seattle/New York Yankees.

Most Wins, Career, Paul’s Presence, road players only:

3–Rich Harden, Oakland.
Mike Mussina, Baltimore/New York Yankees.
2 (tie)–13 players.

Active Leaders in Career Wins who have yet to win in my presence (in other words, folks I still need to cross off the See Them Win List, numbers through 2022):

257–Justin Verlander (#1 overall).
214–Max Scherzer (#3 overall).
210–Clayton Kershaw (#4 overall).
200–Adam Wainwright (#5 overall).
145–Gerrit Cole (#6 overall).

Most Losses, Career, Paul’s Presence:

11–Felix Hernandez, Seattle.
7–Ryan Franklin, Seattle.
6 (tie)–Jarrod Washburn, Los Angeles of Anaheim/Seattle.
–Jamie Moyer, Seattle.
–Freddy Garcia, Seattle.

Most Losses, Career, road players only:

4–Kevin Millwood, Texas
2–Brad Keller, Kansas City.
–Jarrod Washburn, Los Angeles of Anaheim.
–Cole Hamels, Philadelphia/Texas.
–Darrell May, Kansas City.
–Charles Nagy, Cleveland.
–Ramon Ortiz, Anaheim.

Most Saves, Career, Paul’s Presence:

10–J.J. Putz, Seattle.
6–Kazuhiro Sasaki, Seattle.
5 (tie)–Edwin Diaz, Seattle.
–Fernando Rodney, Detroit/Tampa Bay/Seattle.
–David Aardsma, Seattle.
–Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees.

Most Saves, Career, in Paul’s Presence, road players only

4 (tie)–Francisco Rodriguez, Anaheim/LAA.
–Mariano Rivera, New York Yankees.
3 (tie)–Trevor Hoffman, San Diego.
–Todd Jones, Detroit.
–Keith Foulke, Chicago White Sox/Oakland/Boston.
–Randy Myers, Chicago Cubs/Baltimore.

Active Leaders in Career Saves who have yet to save a game in my presence (in other words, folks I still need to cross off the See Them Get A Save List, numbers through 2022):

420–Kenley Jansen (#1 overall)
321–Aroldis Chapman (#3 overall)
262–Mark Melancon (#4 overall).
190–Raisel Iglesias (#6 overall).
165–Josh Hader (#8 overall).

Lowest Earned Run Average, Career (minimum 20 innings pitched):

0.77–George Kirby, Seattle.
1.29–C.C. Sabathia, Cleveland.
1.33–J.J. Putz, Seattle.
1.70–James Paxton, Seattle.
2.05–Mike Mussina, Baltimore/New York Yankees.

Highest Earned Run Average, Career (minimum .33 innings pitched):

162.00 (tie)–Nick Vespi, Baltimore
                    –Mac Suzuki, Seattle.
135.00–Jake Brentz, Kansas City.
81.00 (tie)–Jhoan Duran, Minnesota.
–Kazuo Fukumori, Texas.
–Dave Elder, Cleveland.

Most Earned Runs Given Up With Zero Innings Pitched, Career:

3 (tie)–Jeff Gray, Seattle.
–J.D. Smart, Texas.
–Ricky Bottalico, Kansas City.
–Bob Ojeda, Boston.

Lowest WHIP, Paul’s Presence, Career (minimum 20 innings pitched):

0.66–George Kirby, Seattle.
0.70–J.J. Putz, Seattle.
0.73:–Mike Mussina, Baltimore/New York Yankees.
0.80–James Paxton, Seattle.
0.81–Miguel Batista, Arizona/Seattle.

GAME BATTING–INDIVIDUALS

Most Hits, Game

6–Andres Galarraga, Colorado vs. Houston, July 3, 1995.
5 (tie)–Ty France, Seattle vs. Kansas City, April 23, 2022
–Adam Frazier, Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019.
–Colin Moran, Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019.
–Paul Konerko, Chicago White Sox at Seattle, May 8, 2011.
–Alex Rodriguez, Seattle vs. Detroit, August 18, 1998.

HOME RUNS:

Most Home Runs, Game

3 (tie)–Josh Bell, Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019.
–Ken Griffey Jr., Seattle vs. New York Yankees, May 24, 1996.
2 (tie)–38 times.

STOLEN BASES:

Most stolen bases, game

3–Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle vs. San Diego, June 29, 2003.
2 (tie)–24 times.

RUNS SCORED:

Most runs scored, game

5 (tie)–Carlos Delgado, Toronto at Seattle, May 3, 1999.
(tie)–Ken Griffey Jr., Seattle vs. New York Yankees, May 24, 1996.

4 (tie)–Josh Bell, Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019.
–Asdrubal Cabrera, Cleveland at Seattle, July 24, 2013
–Torii Hunter, Minnesota at Seattle, August 14, 2007.
–Angel Berroa, Kansas City at Detroit, July 22, 2004.
–Ed Sprague, Toronto at Seattle, April 22, 1996.
–Andres Galarraga, Colorado vs. Houston, July 3, 1995.

RUNS BATTED IN:

Most Runs Batted In, Game

7 (tie)–Josh Bell, Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019.
–Mike Sweeney, Kansas City at Detroit, July 22, 2004.
–Richie Sexson, Milwaukee vs. St. Louis, April 18, 2002.
6 (tie)–Bobby Witt, Jr., Kansas City vs. Minnesota, July 28, 2023.
–Omar Vizquel, Cleveland vs. Seattle, October 13, 2001 (Game 3, ALDS).
–Ken Griffey Jr., Seattle vs. New York Yankees, May 24, 1996.

GAME PITCHING–INDIVIDUALS

Most Strikeouts, Game:

16 (tie)–Lance Lynn, Chicago White Sox at Seattle, June 18, 2023.
–Randy Johnson, Seattle vs. Kansas City, July 18, 1997.
15–Roger Clemens, New York Yankees at Seattle, October 14, 2000 (Game 4, ALCS, ties record for most strikeouts in a Championship Series game).
14 (Tie)–Chris Sale, Chicago White Sox at Seattle, August 21, 2015.
–Randy Johnson, Seattle vs. Chicago White Sox, March 31, 1996.

Most Walks, Game:

8–Justin Dunn, Seattle vs. Chicago White Sox, April 7, 2021.
7 (tie)–Jamie Moyer, Seattle vs. New York Yankees, August 29, 2000.
–Jeff Suppan, Kansas City at Seattle, April 23, 2000.
6 (tie)–11 times.

Notable Individual Pitching Performances (either <5 hits allowed or no runs allowed):

No-hitter:

John Means, Baltimore at Seattle, May 5, 2021 (12 strikeouts, 0 walks, won 6-0).

One-hitter:

Zack Grienke, Kansas City at Seattle, August 30, 2009 (5 strikeouts, 1 walk, won 3-0).
Roger Clemens, New York Yankees at Seattle, October 14, 2000 (Game 4, ALCS, 15 strikeouts, 2 walks, won 5-0).

Two-hitter:

Zack Wheeler, Philadelphia vs. New York Mets, August 8, 2021 (11 strikeouts, 1 walk, won 3-0).
Ervin Santana, Minnesota vs. Oakland, July 6, 2016 (8 strikeouts, no walks, won 4-0).
Jamie Moyer, Seattle vs. Kansas City, June 2, 2006 (2 strikeouts, 1 walk, won 4-0).

Three-hitter:

James Paxton, Seattle vs. Detroit, May 19, 2018 (8 strikeouts, 1 walk, won 7-2).
Jason Vargas, Seattle vs. Philadelphia, June 19, 2011 (6 strikeouts, 2 walks, won 2-0).
Miguel Batista, Arizona at Oakland, July 1, 2006 (6 strikeouts, 1 walk, won 7-2).
Joel Pineiro, Seattle vs. Texas, July 26, 2003 (7 strikeouts, 2 walks, won 4-0).
Freddy Garcia, Seattle vs. Anaheim, September 18, 2001 (9 strikeouts, 4 walks, won 4-0).
Jack McDowell, Chicago White Sox vs. Baltimore, July 1, 1993 (3 strikeouts, 1 walk, 1 earned run, lost 0-1).
Mike Williams, Philadelphia at Los Angeles, July 5, 1992 (1 strikeout, 1 walk, 1 earned run, won 9-3).

Four-hitter:

Dallas Keuchel, Houston at Seattle, May 25, 2014 (6 strikeouts, 0 walks, won 4-1).
Dallas Braden, Oakland vs. Seattle, August 11, 2010 (6 strikeouts, 2 walks, won 5-1).
Bartolo Colon, Los Angeles of Anaheim at Seattle, July 5, 2006 (2 strikeouts, no walks, won 4-0).
Kirk Saarloos, Oakland at Seattle, June 23, 2005 (7 strikeouts, no walks, won 5-0).
Freddy Garcia, Seattle vs. San Diego, June 25, 2004 (5 strikeouts, 3 walks, 3 earned runs, lost 2-3).
Woody Williams, San Diego vs. Philadelphia, July 31, 2000 (4 strikeouts, 2 walks, 1 earned run, won 4-1).

Five-hit shutout:

Felix Hernandez, Seattle vs. Boston, June 28, 2012 (13 strikeouts, 1 walk, won 1-0).
Carl Pavano, New York Yankees at Seattle, May 17, 2005 (7 strikeouts, no walks, won 6-0).
Gil Meche, Seattle vs. Boston, September 12, 2004 (4 strikeouts, 1 walk, won 2-0).

Notable Combined Pitching Performances (either <5 hits allowed or no runs allowed):

One-hitter:

Kutter Crawford (5), Ryan Brasier (1), Austin Davis (.2), Tyler Danish (.1), John Schreiber (1), Tanner Houck (1), Boston at Seattle, June 12, 2022 (won 2-0).
Logan Gilbert (7), Paul Sewald (1), and Kendall Graveman (1), Seattle vs. New York Yankees, July 8, 2021 (won 4-0).
Garrett Richards (7), Joe Smith (1) and Ernesto Frieri (1), Los Angeles Angels at Seattle, April 9, 2014 (won 2-0).

Two-hitter:

Luis Castillo (7), Matthew Boyd (1), and Diego Castillo (1), Seattle vs. Oakland, October 1, 2022 (won 5-1).
Charlie Morton (7), A.J. Minter (1) and Will Smith (1), Atlanta at New York Mets, June 22, 2021 (won 3-0).
Jack Flaherty (7) and John Gant (1), St. Louis at San Francisco, July 7, 2019 (lost 1-0).
Hector Santiago (8) and Joe Smith (1), Los Angeles Angels at Seattle, May 15, 2016 (won 3-0).
Scott Kazmir (8) and Vinnie Pestano (1), Cleveland at Seattle, July 24, 2013 (won 10-1).
Felix Hernandez (8) and Brandon League (1), Seattle vs. Florida, June 24, 2011 (won 5-1).
Daniel Cabrera (8) and B.J. Ryan (1), Baltimore at Seattle, July 14, 2005 (won 5-3).
Jamie Moyer (7), Arthur Rhodes (1), and Kazuhiro Sasaki (1), Seattle vs. Baltimore, September 9, 2001 (won 6-0).
Randy Johnson (6), Mike Timlin (1.1), Norm Charlton (.1), and Heathcliff Slocumb (1.1), Seattle vs. Cleveland, August 20, 1997 (won 1-0).

Three-hitter:

Andrew Abbott (6), Lucas Sims (1), Buck Farmer (1), and Alexis Diaz (1), Cincinnati at Baltimore, June 27, 2023 (won 3-1).
Justin Dunn (2), Reggie McClain (2), Zac Grotz (1), Art Warren (1), Dan Altavilla (1), Erik Swanson (1), and Anthony Bass (1), Seattle vs. Oakland, September 29, 2019 (won 3-1).
Sean Manaea (7), Ryan Buchter (.2) and Blake Treinen (1.1), Oakland at Seattle, April 15, 2018 (won 2-1).
Ivan Nova (5), Clay Rapada (.2),  David Phelps (1.1), David Robertson (1) and Rafael Soriano (1), New York Yankees at Seattle, July 25, 2012 (won 5-2).
Michael Pineda (6), Aaron Laffey (1), David Pauley (1) and Brandon League (1), Seattle at Oakland, July 4, 2011 (won 2-1).
Miguel Batista (8) and Sean Green (1), Seattle vs. Texas, September 29, 2007 (won 5-1).
Aaron Harang (8) and Mike Gosling (1), Cincinnati at Seattle, June 22, 2007 (won 16-1).
Joel Pineiro (8) and Shigetoshi Hasegawa (1), Seattle vs. Houston, June 8, 2004 (lost 0-1).
Joel Pineiro (7), Arthur Rhodes (1) and Jeff Nelson (1), Seattle vs. Detroit, July 31, 2003 (won 4-0).
Pedro Martinez (8) and Rolando Arrojo (1), Boston at Seattle, May 1, 2001 (won 2-0).
Ricky Bones (7), Jesse Orosco (1.1), and Doug Henry (.2), Milwaukee at Cleveland, June 24, 1993 (won 5-3).

Four-hitter:

Cole Irvin (5), Mike Baumann (1), Jacob Webb (.2), Cionel Perez (.1), Yennier Cano (1), and Felix Bautista (2), Baltimore at Seattle, August 12, 2023 (won 1-0, 10 innings).
George Kirby (9) and Andres Munoz (1), Seattle vs. Baltimore, August 12, 2023 (lost 0-1, 10 innings).
Robbie Ray (7) Paul Sewald (1), and Sergio Romo (1), Seattle vs. Boston, June 12, 2022 (lost 0-2).
Nick Nelson (.2), Luis Cessa (3.1), Domingo German (3), Jonathan Loaisiga (1) and Chad Green (1), New York Yankees at Seattle, July 7, 2021 (won 5-4).
Sean Manaea (7), Sergio Romo (1) and Lou Trivino (1), Oakland at Seattle, July 22, 2021 (won 4-1).
James Paxton (7), Alex Colome (1) and Edwin Diaz (1), Seattle vs. Houston, July 30, 2019 (won 2-0).
Gerrit Cole (6.2) and Ryan Pressly (1.1), Houston at Seattle, July 30, 2018 (lost 0-2).
Derek Holland (6), Ray Black (1), Tony Watson (.1) and Sam Dyson (.2), San Francisco at Seattle, July 25, 2018 (lost 2-3).
Mike Leake (8) and Alex Colome (1), Seattle vs. Minnesota, May 27, 2018 (won 3-1).
Chris Sale (8) and David Robertson (.2), Chicago White Sox at Seattle, July 18, 2016 (lost 3-4).
Hisashi Iwakuma (7), Edwin Diaz (1) and Steve Cishek (1), Seattle vs. Houston, July 16, 2016 (won 1-0)..
Edinson Volquez (7), Kelvin Herrera (1) and Wade Davis (1), Kansas City vs. Cleveland, May 15, 2016 (won 2-1).
James Paxton (5), Yoervis Medina (1), Danny Farquhar (1.2), Tom Wilhelmsen (0.1) and Fernando Rodney (1), Seattle vs. Los Angeles Angels, April 8, 2004 (won 5-3).
Felix Hernandez (6), Carter Capps (2) and Oliver Perez (1), Seattle vs. Los Angeles Angels, August 23, 2013 (lost 2-0)
Oscar Villareal (5), Chad Peronto (1), Danys Baez (2), and Bob Wickman (1), Atlanta at Washington, August 17, 2006 (won 5-0).
Jarrod Washburn (6.2), Rafael Soriano (1.1), and J.J. Putz (1), Seattle vs. Tampa Bay, August 9, 2006 (won 2-0).
Gil Meche (7), Rafael Soriano (1) and J.J. Putz (1), Seattle vs. Detroit, July 9, 2006 (won 3-2).
Jarrod Washburn (7), Rafael Soriano (1) and George Sherrill (1), Seattle vs. Cleveland, May 7, 2006 (lost 0-2).
Randy Johnson (7), Tom Gordon (1) and Mariano Rivera (1), New York Yankees at Seattle, August 31, 2005 (won 2-0).
Bartolo Colon (8) and Esteban Yan (1), Los Angeles of Anaheim at Seattle, August 13, 2005 (won 9-1).
Jarrod Washburn (7.2) and Brendan Donnelly (1.1), Los Angeles of Anaheim at Seattle, May 2, 2005 (won 5-0).
Chan Ho Park (7), Ben Shouse (0), Doug Brocail (1) and Francisco Cordero (1), Texas at Seattle, October 3, 2004 (won 3-0).
Ben Sheets (5), Dave Burba (2) and Ben Ford (2), Milwaukee at Houston, April 15, 2004 (won 6-2).
Eric DuBose (8), Jorge Julio (.1) and B.J. Ryan (0), Baltimore at Seattle, August 29, 2003 (lost 2-3).
Jamie Moyer (7), Jeff Nelson (1) and Arthur Rhodes (1), Seattle vs. Anaheim, April 8, 2003 (won 5-0).
Kevin Appier (8) and Troy Percival (1), Anaheim at Seattle, July 28, 2002 (won 1-0).
Mike Sirotka (7), Bobby Howry (1.1), Kerry Wunsch (0), and Keith Foulke (.2), Chicago White Sox at Seattle, August 25, 2000 (won 4-1).
Randy Johnson (8) and Scott Sanders (1), Seattle vs. Colorado, June 13, 1997 (won 6-1).
Dave Stewart (6) and Kevin Campbell (3), Oakland at Texas, August 4, 1992 (won 9-0).

Five-hit shutout:

George Kirby (7), Matt Brash (1) and Paul Sewald (1), Seattle vs. Minnesota, July 20, 2023 (won 5-0_.
James Paxton (8) and Carson Smith (1), Seattle vs. Boston, May 17, 2015 (won 5-0).
Felix Hernandez (8) and David Aardsma (1), Seattle vs. Oakland, August 10, 2010 (won 2-0)
Edwin Jackson (7.2), Bobby Seay (.1), and Fernando Rodney (1), Detroit at Seattle, April 18, 2009 (won 2-0).
Jake Woods (5), Julio Mateo (2.1), and Eric O’Flaherty (1.2), Seattle vs. Boston, August 25, 2006 (won 6-0).
Ryan Franklin (8) and Arthur Rhodes (1), Seattle vs. Montreal, June 12, 2003 (won 1-0).
Jarrod Washburn (8) and Troy Percival (1), Anaheim at Seattle, April 10, 2003 (won 3-0).
Jamie Moyer (8) and Gregg Olson (1), Baltimore at Chicago White Sox, July 1, 1993 (won 1-0).

Six-hit shutout:

Jeff Samardzija (7), Sam Dyson (1), and Will Smith (1), San Francisco vs. St. Louis, July 7, 2019 (won 1-0).
Roger Clemens (6.2), Ben Lidge (1.1), and Octavio Dotel (1), Houston at Seattle, June 8, 2004 (won 1-0).

Seven-hit shutout:

Lance McCullers (6), Hector Neris (1), Rafael Montero (1), Ryan Pressly (1), Bryan Abreu (1), Ryne Stanek (1), Hunter Brown (2), and Luis Garcia (5), Houston at Seattle, October 15, 2022 (Game 3, ALDS) (won 1-0, 18 innings).
Yovani Gallardo (5.1), Andrew Faulkner (1.2), Sam Dyson (1) and Shawn Tolleson (1), Texas at Seattle, September 7, 2015 (won 3-0).
Mark Mulder (7), Ricardo Rincon (.2) and Keith Foulke (1.1), Oakland at Seattle, July 24, 2003 (won 3-0).

Nine-hit shutout:

C.C. Sabathia (8) and Bob Wickman (1), Cleveland at Seattle, May 7, 2006 (won 2-0).

TEAM RECORDS IN MY PRESENCE

American League

(through 2023 season)

Team W/L Pct. Home Road Playoffs
New York Yankees 11-6 .647 2-0 9-6 2-0
California/Anaheim/Los Angeles Angels 20-11 .645 1-1 19-10  
Houston 7-5 .583 2-2  5-3 1-0
Cleveland 11-8 .579 2-2 9-6 1-1
Oakland 20-17 .541 1-2 19-15  
Toronto 8-7 .533 2-0 6-7  
Detroit 10-9 .526 3-1 7-8  
Kansas City 13-12 .520 4-0 9-12  
Baltimore 8-8 .500 1-1 7-7  
Seattle 125-128 .494 119-126 6-2 1-4
Chicago White Sox 8-10 .444 0-2 8-8  
Boston 8-13 .381 0-2 8-11  
Texas 11-20 .355 1-4 10-16  
Tampa Bay 3-6 .333 0-1 3-5  
Minnesota 5-13 .278 1-5 4-8  

National League

(through 2023 season)

Team W/L Pct. Home Road Playoffs
Arizona 5-1 .833 2-0 3-1  
San Diego 10-3 .769 2-1 8-2  
Pittsburgh 7-3 .700 3-2 4-1  
Chicago Cubs 5-3 .625 2-1 3-2  
Philadelphia 6-4 .600 4-0 2-4  
Los Angeles Dodgers 4-3 .571 1-2 3-1  
Cincinnati 5-4 .556 0-2 5-2  
Montreal/Washington 8-7 .533 2-4 6-3  
Colorado 12-12 .500 9-10 3-2 0-1
Miami/Florida 4-4 .500 1-2 3-2  
Atlanta 5-7 .417 0-3 5-4 1-0
San Francisco 4-7 .364 3-0 1-7  
Milwaukee 4-7 .364 1-3 3-4  
St. Louis 3-6 .333 2-1 1-5  
New York Mets 3-9 .250 1-1 2-8  

SINGLE-GAME TEAM RECORDS

RUNS

Most runs, game:

18–Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019 (won 18-5).
17–Cleveland vs. Seattle, October 13, 2001 (Game 3, ALDS) (won 17-2).
16 (tie)–Cincinnati at Seattle, June 22, 2007 (won 16-1).
–Toronto at Seattle, May 3, 1999 (won 16-10).
–Toronto at Seattle, April 22, 1996 (won 16-7).

Most runs, game, both teams:

26–Toronto (16) at Seattle (10), May 3, 1999.
25–Houston (10) at Colorado (15), July 3, 1995.
23 (tie)–Chicago Cubs (5) at Pittsburgh (18), July 1, 2019.
–Colorado (11) at Seattle (12), June 12, 1997.
–Toronto (16) at Seattle (7), April 22, 1996.

HITS:

Most hits, game:

23–Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019.
21–Colorado vs. Houston, July 3, 1995.
19 (tie)–Oakland at Seattle, September 26, 2006.
–Cleveland vs. Seattle, October 13, 2001 (game 3, ALDS).
18 (tie)–Minnesota at Seattle, August 14, 2007.
–Colorado at Seattle, June 12, 1997.
–Cleveland at Seattle, April 8, 1997.
–San Diego at Colorado, June 28, 1994 (first game).

Most hits, game, both teams:

36–Chicago Cubs (13) at Pittsburgh (23), July 1, 2019.
35–Cleveland (18) at Seattle (17), April 8, 1997.
34–Houston (13) at Colorado (21), July 3, 1995.
32 (tie)–Oakland (16) at Texas (16), April 13, 2004.
Tampa Bay (17) at Seattle (15), May 30, 1999.
San Diego (18) at Colorado (14), June 28, 1994 (first game).

Fewest hits, game, both teams:

5–Boston (4) at Seattle (1), June 12, 2022.
6 (tie)–New York Yankees (1) at Seattle (5), July 8, 2021.
–Kansas City (5) at Seattle(1), August 30, 2009.
–New York Yankees (5) at Seattle (1), October 14, 2000 (Game 4, ALCS).
7 (tie)–New York Mets (2) at Philadelphia (5), August 8, 2021.
–Atlanta (5) at New York Mets (2), June 22, 2021.

ERRORS

Most errors, game:

4 (tie)–Seattle vs. Texas, April 28, 2019.
–Seattle vs. Los Angeles Angels, April 1, 2019.
–Seattle vs. Los Angeles Dodgers, June 6, 1998.
–Seattle vs. Kansas City, August 12, 1996.
–Colorado vs. Atlanta, October 3, 1995 (Game 1, NLDS).
–Colorado vs. Pittsburgh, August 22, 1995.
–Colorado vs. San Diego, June 28, 1994 (2nd game, 11 innings).

Most errors, both teams, game:

5 (tie)–Los Angeles Angels (1) at Seattle (4), April 1, 2019.
–Los Angeles Dodgers (1) at Seattle (4), June 6, 1998.
–Atlanta (1) at Colorado (4), October 3, 1995 (Game 1, NLDS).
4 (tie)–12 times.

HOME RUNS

Most home runs, game:

5 (tie)–Pittsburgh vs. Chicago Cubs, July 1, 2019.
–Pittsburgh at Seattle, June 25, 2013.
–Cincinnati at Seattle, June 22, 2007.
–Seattle vs. Toronto, May 3, 1999.
–Toronto at Seattle, April 30, 1999.
–Colorado vs. Houston, July 3, 1995.

Most home runs, game, both teams:

9 (tie)–Toronto (4) at Seattle (5), May 3, 1999.
–Toronto (5) at Seattle (4), April 30, 1999.
7 (tie)–Seattle (3) at Minnesota (4), July 26, 2023.
–New York Yankees (4) at Seattle (3), August 22, 2016.
–Pittsburgh (5) at Seattle (2), June 25, 2013.
–Toronto (3) at Seattle (4), April 22, 1996.
–Houston (2) at Colorado (5), July 3, 1995.
–San Francisco (3) at Colorado (4), May 11, 1995.

STRIKEOUTS

Most strikeouts, game (pitchers’ team listed):

22–Houston at Seattle, October 15, 2022 (Game 3, ALDS, 18 innings).
21–Seattle vs. Chicago White Sox, March 31, 1996 (12 innings).
20–Seattle vs. Houston, October 15, 2022 (Game 3, ALDS, 18 innings).
18–Chicago White Sox at Seattle, June 18, 2023
18–Seattle vs. Oakland, July 23, 2021.

Most strikeouts, game, both teams (strikeouts by pitchers given, not by batters):

42–Houston (22) at Seattle (20), October 15, 2022 (Game 3, ALDS, 18 innings).
31–Oakland (13) at Seattle (18), July 23, 2021.
29–Chicago White Sox (8) at Seattle (21), March 31, 1996 (12 innings).
25–Chicago White Sox (18) at Seattle (7), June 18, 2023.
25–Texas (11) at Seattle (14), May 10, 2023.

STOLEN BASES

Most stolen bases, game:

4–Kansas City vs. Minnesota, July 28, 2023.
4–San Diego at Seattle, July 16, 1999.
3 (tie)–20 times.

Most stolen bases, game, both teams:

6–Minnesota (2) at Kansas City (4), July 28, 2023.
5–Atlanta (2) at Pittsburgh (3), August 3, 2006.
4 (tie)–Chicago White Sox (1) at Seattle (3), June 17, 2023.
Los Angeles of Anaheim (3) at Seattle (1), April 13, 2008.
–Cleveland (2) at Seattle (2), April 25, 2000.
–Boston (1) at Seattle (3), September 6, 1999.
–San Diego (4) at Seattle (0), July 16, 1999.
–Toronto (2) at Seattle (2), April 30, 1999.
–Boston (1) at Seattle (3), August 25, 1997.
–Kansas City (2) at Seattle (2), July 18. 1997.

Longest game:

18 innings–Houston at Seattle, October 15, 2022 (Game 3, ALDS).
13 innings–Texas at Seattle, May 26, 2013.
12 innings (tie)–New York Yankees at Seattle, May 8, 2011.
–Boston at Seattle, July 23, 2008.
–Chicago White Sox at Seattle, August 26, 2005.
–Chicago White Sox at Seattle, March 31, 1996.

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