The Club Races
Power and speed in the same season. Only four players have ever gone 40/40 — Canseco, Bonds, A-Rod, Soriano, and then Ohtani blew past all of them with the only 50/50 season in history (54 HR / 59 SB, 2024). Here's who's in the hunt right now, and exactly what it would take.
30/30 club
1 player in the hunt. A club chase is only as feasible as its weaker leg.
| # | Player | Team | HR | SB | Proj | Still needs | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CHC | 19 | 23 | 34/41 | 11 HR · 7 SB in 72 games | ON PACE |
The hot streak it would take
Pete Crow-Armstrong (19/23): needs 11 HR and 7 SB over the final 72 games — a homer every 6.5 games and a steal every 10.3 games from here. Sustained all year, that's a 25-HR, 16-SB pace. ON PACE
40/40 club
No one is currently on track for a 40/40 season. The closest thing to a live chase:
What it would take
Pete Crow-Armstrong (19/23): needs 21 HR and 17 SB over the final 72 games — a homer every 3.4 games and a steal every 4.2 games from here. Sustained all year, that's a 47-HR, 38-SB pace. EXTREME
Oneil Cruz (14/21): needs 26 HR and 19 SB over the final 71 games — a homer every 2.7 games and a steal every 3.7 games from here. Sustained all year, that's a 59-HR, 43-SB pace. EXTREME
50/50 club
No one is currently on track for a 50/50 season. The closest thing to a live chase:
What it would take
Pete Crow-Armstrong (19/23): needs 31 HR and 27 SB over the final 72 games — a homer every 2.3 games and a steal every 2.7 games from here. Sustained all year, that's a 70-HR, 61-SB pace — a historically absurd gear. EXTREME
Oneil Cruz (14/21): needs 36 HR and 29 SB over the final 71 games — a homer every 2.0 games and a steal every 2.4 games from here. Sustained all year, that's a 82-HR, 66-SB pace — a historically absurd gear. EXTREME
How to read this page
Projections use team-game pace (current ÷ team games × 162). "In the hunt" means the weaker leg of a player's HR/SB pair still grades at long-shot feasibility or better. The streak requirements translate what's left into a rest-of-season rhythm — a homer every N games, a steal every M — because that's the form a real chase actually takes down the stretch.