Atlantic City Bacharach Giants Home Runs Charts and Records
About Home Runs
Home runs allowed is the number of home runs given up by a pitcher or a team's pitchers over a defined period of time. A home run is attributed to a pitcher when the batter safely reaches home in the same play the ball was put into play and there were no fielding errors. Most commonly this is when a player hits the ball over the outfield fence in fair territory, but on some occasions a well-placed hit into the outfield can result in an inside-the-park home run. Generally, for Home Runs, lower is better. (Source)
Top Atlantic City Bacharach Giants Players by Home Runs
Which Atlantic City Bacharach Giants players rank highest in Home Runs? Below are the top ten by single season and by career totals with the team, requiring at least 50 innings pitched for a season record, or 100 innings pitched for a career record with the team.


Atlantic City Bacharach Giants Home Runs Per Season
Atlantic City Bacharach Giants's Home Runs for each season of their history, plotted alongside yearly averages for MLB, the American Negro League, and the American Negro League.

Atlantic City Bacharach Giants Home Runs Season Distribution vs. MLB and Peers
Each box summarizes Home Runs across all seasons, comparing the Atlantic City Bacharach Giants to MLB as a whole, the American Negro League, and the American Negro League. The box covers the middle 50% of seasons, the center line is the median, and the whiskers extend to the min and max values.

Atlantic City Bacharach Giants Cumulative Home Runs — Franchise Progression
A running total of the Atlantic City Bacharach Giants's Home Runs through each season of their MLB history. Each point marks the cumulative franchise total at the end of that year.

Atlantic City Bacharach Giants Home Runs — Season-by-Season Breakdown
Every season of Atlantic City Bacharach Giants's history with Home Runs alongside yearly averages for MLB, the American Negro League, and the American Negro League. Career totals include sum, average, minimum, maximum, and median.
