Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Récords. Mayor número de homeruns de por vida (762 hasta el 29 de agosto de 2007 ). Mayor número de homeruns en una temporada (73 en 2001). Mayor número de impulsadas en un juego de 9 innings (9 en 2002). Único jugador en haber sido elegido 7 veces como MVP en la historia de las Grandes Ligas (1990, 1992, 1993, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004).

  2. Riverside, CA. College. Arizona State. Career Stats. AVG. .298. HR. 762. RBI. 1996. OPS. 1.051. Complete career MLB stats for the San Francisco Giants Left Fielder Barry Bonds on ESPN. Includes...

  3. Debut: (Age 21-310d, 15,165th in major league history) 5 AB, 0 H, 0 HR, 0 RBI, 0 SB. Last Game: (Age 43-064d) 3 AB, 0 H, 0 HR, 0 RBI, 0 SB. Rookie Status: Exceeded rookie limits during 1986 season. Agents: Jeff Borris • Previously: Dennis Gilbert, Rod Wright, Scott Boras. Full Name: Barry Lamar Bonds. Twitter:

    • July 24, 1964
  4. Led National League in walks (120) and on-base pct. (.431) while ranking amongst leaders in runs (2nd - 109), home runs (4th - 33), RBI (6th - 104), total bases (5th - 292), slugging pct. (5th - .577), extra base hits (tied for 3rd - 70) and outfield assists (tied for 4th - 12)...was leading NL vote-getter for All-Star Game, receiving 1,392,130 ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Barry_BondsBarry Bonds - Wikipedia

    The hype surrounding Bonds's pursuit of the home run record escalated on May 14. On this day, Sports Auction for Heritage (a Dallas-based auction house) offered US$1 million to the fan who would catch Bonds's record-breaking 756th-career home run. The million-dollar offer was rescinded on June 11 out of concern of fan safety.

    • .298
    • 762
    • 2,935
    • 1,996
  6. Barry Bonds was the first National League player in history to record a 40 home run and 40 steal ( 40 / 40 Club) season. 2 - Barry Bonds was the National League batting champion in 2002 ( Top 25) and the National League batting champion in 2004 ( Top 25 ).

  7. Hace 4 días · One of the greatest players of all time Barry Bonds holds the single-season home run record (73) with his 2001 performance and is first on the all-time MLB home runs list with 762. He also leads the postion-WAR column with 162.8. His lifetime Slugging Percentage of .606 ranks first among post-integration players.