Friday, February 8, 2019
Hitting for the Cycle in Baseball
Following nearly five years as vice president of W2 Communications in Baltimore, Maryland, Wayne Schepens founded LaunchTech Communications in 2015 and continues to serve the company as managing director. Beyond his responsibilities at LaunchTech, Wayne Schepens enjoys spending time with his children and staying active by coaching baseball.
In baseball, a player can reach base by error or by being walked by the pitcher in addition to hitting a single, double, triple, or homerun. A player who records at least one of each of these hits in a single game is said to have hit for the cycle. If the player also hits the cycle in this exact order, it is considered a “natural cycle,” one of the sport’s rarest achievements.
In Major League Baseball (MLB), hitting for the cycle is relatively rare. Curry Foley recorded the first professional cycle in 1888, and 323 additional cycles have been recorded since, for an average of about 2.5 cycles per season. Brock Holt of the Boston Red Sox completed the cycle against the New York Yankees during the 2018 American League Division Series, the first postseason cycle in league history.
John Reilly, Bob Meusel, Babe Herman, and Adrian Beltre are tied with three career cycles each, while five players have recorded two cycles in the same season. The natural cycle has only been achieved 14 times in the history of professional baseball, most recently in 2006 by Gary Matthews, Jr. No player has hit for the cycle with an inside the park homerun since 1943.