The Houston Astros first .500 season was in 1969, they finished the year with an 81-81 record.
The first time they finished above .500 was in 1972 (84-69 .549)
Chris Donnels played in 23 games at first base for the Houston Astros in 1993, starting in 20 of them. He played for a total of 500 outs, equivalent to 18.52 9-inning games. He made 157 putouts, had 9 assists, and committed 2 errors, equivalent to .108 errors per 9-inning game. He had 14 double plays.
In 2012, David Carpenter played in 31 games for the Houston Astros, and batting in of them. He had 2 at bats, getting 1 hit, for a .500 batting average, with 0 runs batted in. He was walked 0 times. He struck out 0 times. He hit only singles.
Brandon Backe played in 31 games at pitcher for the Houston Astros in 2008, starting in all of them. He played for a total of 500 outs, equivalent to 18.52 9-inning games. He made 15 putouts, had 17 assists, and committed one error, equivalent to .054 errors per 9-inning game. He had 2 double plays.
Theft 50$ to 500$ is a 500$ bond.
Starting in 1982, the Daytona 500 became the first race to begin the Nascar schedule.
The address of the Houston Metropolitan Research Center is: 500 Mckinney, Houston, 77002 M
The Chihuahuan Desert is the closest to Houston but still about 500 miles away.
500 hours
The last Daytona 500 was on February 24, 2013 and was won by Jimmie Johnson. This is the first race of every new Nascar Cup Series season.
Yes, any team who finishes above .500 will likely be in the postseason No, a 500 season is neither winning or losing. it is exactly in the middle. the same exact number of wins as losses
If you mean go 500 in a season its simple basically win the same amount of games you have lost a 15-15 team is a 500 team
Rusty Staub, who had a career total of 2,716 hits during his 23 seasons in major league baseball, is the only player to have 500 hits for four different teams. He played for the Houston Colt .45/Astros (792 hits), the Montreal Expos (531), the New York Mets (709), the Detroit Tigers (582) and the Texas Rangers (102). Staub, who broke in with Houston when he was 19 in 1963, retired as a Mets player-coach after the 1985 season at the age of 41. He, Ty Cobb and Gary Sheffield are the only players who hit home runs before the age of 20 and after they turned 40.