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Former Dodgers star Shawn Green calls Shohei Ohtani the greatest player who has ever lived after Ohtani broke Green's franchise home run record.
Former Dodgers star Shawn Green calls Shohei Ohtani the greatest player who has ever lived after Ohtani broke Green's franchise home run record.
Shawn Green & more Dodgers history Also on this day in Dodgers history, Ron Cey belted his 200th career home run during a 10th-inning victory over the Cincinnati Reds in 1981.
Dodgers manager Jim Tracy planned to pinch-hit for Shawn Green in the ninth inning on May 23, 2002, but the right fielder argued his way into one final at-bat.
Shohei Ohtani becomes the first player to achieve 50 home runs and 50 stolen bases in a single season as the Dodgers beat Miami 20-4 to clinch a playoff berth.
On May 23, 2002, in a game against the Milwaukee Brewers, Roberts watched from the Dodgers dugout as teammate Shawn Green slugged four home runs, part of a 6-for-6 day.
2002 — Los Angeles Dodgers slugger Shawn Green became the 14th man in major league history to homer four times in a game and set a big league record with 19 total bases.
Adrian Beltre #29 of the Los Angeles Dodgers is congratulated by Paul Lo Duca #16 and Shawn Green #15 after all scored on Beltre's three run home run in the third inning against the Arizona ...
With 48 home runs and 48 stolen bases, Ohtani is now tied with Adrian Beltré for the second-most homers in a single season in Dodgers history. Shawn Green, who went deep 49 times in 2001, holds ...
Shawn Green, whose Dodgers single-season home run record Ohtani both tied and broke Thursday, owns the MLB record for total bases in a game with 19 (accomplished with four homers, a single and a ...
Ohtani took care of the stolen bases earlier in the game, swiping his 50th in the first and his 51st in the second. He broke the Dodgers' franchise record of 49 homers set by Shawn Green in 2001.