On May 6, 1934, at Fenway Park, the Boston Red Sox put up one of the strangest innings in baseball history. Twelve runs in the bottom of the 4th against the Tigers. And in the middle of it, FOUR consecutive triples, a record that's still standing 92 years later. Center fielder Carl Reynolds hit the first. Left fielder Moose Solters hit the second. Catcher Rick Ferrell hit the third — a future Hall of Famer who had no business legging out a triple. And then 25-year-old third baseman Bucky Walters hit the fourth. Walters is the kicker. He'd convert to pitching three years later, win 27 games for Cincinnati in 1939, take home the NL MVP, and finish his career in Cooperstown as one of the great right-handers of his era. On this day, though, he was an infielder closing out the most absurd four-batter sequence in Red Sox history. Reynolds added a fifth triple later in the game. Final: Boston 14, Detroit 4. The Tigers, who'd go on to win the AL pennant that year and reach the World Series, never recovered. To this day, no team has matched the four-triples-in-a-row barrage Boston dropped on them in that one inning.
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