On May 23, 2002, at Miller Park in Milwaukee, Los Angeles Dodgers right fielder Shawn Green delivered the most absurd single-game offensive performance in modern baseball history. 6-for-6. 4 home runs. 1 double. 1 single. 7 RBIs. 6 runs scored. 19 total bases. The 19 total bases were — and still are (Nick Kurtz tied it last year) — the most by any player in a single MLB game since the dead-ball era. Green broke Joe Adcock's 1954 record (18) and Josh Hamilton's 2012 effort would tie Adcock at 18 but never reach Green. He homered in the 1st, the 4th, the 5th, and the 8th, hitting them to all parts of the ballpark off four different pitchers. The kicker: Green had been in a season-long slump entering the game, hitting .238 with just three home runs. Dodgers manager Jim Tracy had actually considered benching him. The Brewers had a tarp draped over Bernie Brewer's slide because the home team was hitting so poorly. Green hit it twice anyway. Final: Dodgers 16, Brewers 3. Green's quote afterward: "I've never had a day like that in my life, and I never will again." He retired with 328 career home runs. Four of them came in that one Thursday afternoon's worth of swings.
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