The Cowboys had a winning regular season record for 20 seasons between 1966-1985.
The Dallas Cowboys from 1966 to 1985 (20 seasons) hold the record for most consecutive winning seasons.
Matt Kemp
In 1889, Sam Thompson led the league in home runs, with 20.
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Career Records: Overall-- Barry Bonds (762) Inside the Park-- Jessee Burkett (55) By Pitcher-- Wes Ferrell (38) Single Season Records: Overall-- Barry Bonds (73) (2001) Most by Team- Seattle Mariners (264) (1997) Seasonal Records: Most Seasons with 40 Home Runs-- Babe Ruth (11) (1920-21, 1923-24, 1926-32) Most Consecutive Seasons with 40 Home Runs-- Babe Ruth (7) (1926-32) Most Seasons with 30 Home Runs-- Hank Aaron (15) (1957-63, 1965-67, 1969-73) Most Consecutive Seasons with 30 Home Runs-- Alex Rodrigues (13) (1998-2010) Most Seasons with 20 Home Runs-- Hank Aaron (20) (1955-74) Most Consecutive Seasons with 20 Home Runs-- Hank Aaron (20) (1955-74) Most Years as League Leader-- Babe Ruth (12) (1918-21, 1923-24, 1926-31) Most Consecutive Years as League Leader-- Ralph Kiner (7) (1946-52) The person with the most home runs in his career from around the world is Sadaharu Oh from Japan with 868.
Dallas Cowboys. 20 consecutive winning seasons.
The Giants with 20.
The Cowboys had a winning regular season record for 20 seasons between 1966-1985.
The Dallas Cowboys from 1966 to 1985 (20 seasons) hold the record for most consecutive winning seasons.
Matt Kemp
Maurice "Rocket" Richard
It was on May 20, 2009. Nick Swisher, Robinson Cano and Melky Cabrera hit three consecutive home runs off Baltimore Orioles pitcher Jeremy Guthrie.
Yes. The Cowboys were the first and only National Football League team to post 20 consecutive winning seasons. From 1966 to 1985, they played better than .500 football and missed the playoffs only twice (in 1974 and 1984).
That was 1997 when they hit 264 home runs breaking the MLB record of 257 home runs by the 1996 Baltimore Orioles. Ken Griffey Jr. led the team with 56, Jay Buhner had 40, and Paul Sorrento had 31. They had 6 players with 20+ HRs that season (the 3 above and Edgar Martinez with 28, Alex Rodriguez with 23, and Russ Davis with 20). Griffey Jr. hit home runs in 8 consecutive games, tying an MLB record.
In 1889, Sam Thompson led the league in home runs, with 20.
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