Diamondbacks slugger Eugenio Suarez entered the history books on Saturday night, blasting four home runs in a game against the Braves and becoming the first player with a four-home run game since 2017.
The 33-year old homered in the second, fourth, six and ninth innings at home, with his fourth home run tying the game and forcing extra innings. Grant Holmes allowed three of Suarez's home runs, while Raisel Iglesias allowed the fourth.
FOUR AT-BATS
— MLB (@MLB) April 27, 2025
FOUR HOME RUNS
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, EUGENIO SUÁREZ 😤 pic.twitter.com/uSEW7kHUOB
Suarez matched the MLB record with an unbelievable performance. No player has ever hit more than four home runs in a game, and a four-home run game is rarer in MLB's long history than a perfect game.
📲 Follow The Sporting News on WhatsApp
Here's a look at the company Suarez joined with his historic performance.
SN's MLB HQ: Live MLB scores | Updated MLB standings | Full MLB schedule
MLB 4-home run games
No player has ever hit more than four home runs in one MLB game. Here are the 19 who have hit four in a single game:
Player | Date | Team |
Bobby Lowe | May 30, 1884 | Beaneaters |
Ed Delahanty* | July 13, 1896 | Phillies |
Lou Gehrig | June 3, 1932 | Yankees |
Chuck Klein | July 10, 1936 | Phillies |
Pat Seerey | July 18, 1948 | White Sox |
Gil Hodges | Aug. 31, 1950 | Dodgers |
Joe Adcock | July 31, 1954 | Braves |
Rocky Colavito | June 10, 1959 | Indians |
Willie Mays | April 30, 1961 | Giants |
Mike Schmidt | April 17, 1976 | Phillies |
Bob Horner* | July 6, 1986 | Braves |
Mark Whiten | Sept. 7, 1993 | Cardinals |
Mike Cameron | May 2, 2002 | Mariners |
Shawn Green | May 23, 2002 | Dodgers |
Carlos Delgado | Sept. 25, 2003 | Blue Jays |
Josh Hamilton | May 8, 2012 | Rangers |
Scooter Gennett | June 6, 2017 | Reds |
J.D. Martinez | Sept. 4, 2017 | Diamondbacks |
Eugenio Suarez* | April 26, 2025 | Diamondbacks |
* — Hit 4 home runs in a loss.
Suarez became the 19th player to achieve the feat and the first since 2017, when J.D. Martinez did it in the same building.
Because the Diamondbacks allowed a run in the 10th inning and couldn't match it, Suarez became the third player in MLB history and first since 1986 to hit four home runs and still lose.
After a scorching hot opening series, Suarez was ice cold entering Saturday. He was hitting just .145 with two home runs since the calendar flipped from March to April, with only five singles all season.
While Suarez might rather have the win, he can say he's done something less than two dozen other players have done.
The baseball world took notice of Suarez's power outburst, too. The bat he used during his four-dinger game will be enshrined into Cooperstown, Suarez revealed on Sunday morning.