Angels star Mike Trout hits 400th career home run

Trout joins Giancarlo Stanton as the only active MLB players with 400 career home runs.

Mike Trout and Giancarlo Stanton are the only two active MLB players with 400 career home runs. (Photo by Eric Thayer/Getty Images)
Mike Trout and Giancarlo Stanton are the only two active MLB players with 400 career home runs. (Photo by Eric Thayer/Getty Images)
Eric Thayer via Getty Images

Mike Trout became the 59th member of the 400-home-run club on Saturday with a solo blast off Jaden Hill of the Colorado Rockies.

The Los Angeles Angels star joins Giancarlo Stanton as the only active MLB players with 400 career home runs. Stanton currently has 450 home runs.

Trout reaches the 400-home run milestone on the heels of a career-long drought that saw him go homer-less for 28 games — from Aug. 6 to Sept. 11, when he hit No. 399.

This is the second statistical milestone the 34-year-old Trout has reached this season. In July, he became the ninth active player to record 1,000 career RBI when he hit a 443-foot home run, the 497th of his career.

Trout also hit his 200th career home run at Angels Stadium on Aug 6., becoming the 27th player in MLB history to have hit at least 200 homers in one stadium. He is also the only player who has hit 200 home runs and stolen 100 bases in one ballpark.

“To think about it, it’s just how fast it’s going,” Trout said earlier this season. “Just trying to enjoy every minute of it. The milestones are awesome. I’m looking forward to hopefully getting them.”

Trout, a three-time AL MVP and 11-time All-Star, might've reached 400 career home runs sooner, but injuries have kept him off the field on a regular basis in recent years. Since 2020, he has played more than 82 games in a season only once. 

He began his MLB career in 2013 and hit 250 home runs over his first seven seasons with the Angels, including twice surpassing 40 homers in a season.

This season, Trout has been regular presence as a designated hitter, rather than in the outfield. A bone bruise on his surgically repaired left knee in May forced him to miss 26 games.

“I’m just happy to be in the lineup, contributing,” Trout said last month. “Years past, it’s just come to the ballpark, not be able to at least hit. That’s been frustrating. That’s been tough.”

Category: General Sports