
"During the final day of the 2025 MLB regular season on Sunday, Shohei Ohtani slugged another home run for the Los Angeles Dodges to give him 55 total on the season. That homer made some history, setting a new Dodgers' franchise record for most homers in a single-season and surpassing the mark previously set by Ohtani last season with 54. Ohtani's record-setting home run came in the seventh inning against Gabe Speier to put the Dodgers up 6-0."
"The homer cane in a two-strike count against a 95 mph fastball and traveled 412 feet with a 109.5 mph exit velocity. In addition to his homer breaking a franchise record for the Dodgers, Ohtani became the first player in MLB history to finish a season with exactly 55 home runs. Ohtani also extended his own record of most home runs in a season while also making multiple pitching starts, according to Sarah Langs of MLB.com."
"The previous three highest-marks also belong to Ohtani, with 46 in 2021, 44 in 2023 and 34 in 2022. He has slugged 109 total home runs in his first two seasons with the Dodgers, which tied Alex Rodriguez (Texas Rangers, 2001-02) for the second-highest total by a player in their first two seasons with a franchise. Babe Ruth holds the record with 113 for the New York Yankees from 1920-21."
Shohei Ohtani finished the 2025 regular season with 55 home runs, breaking the Los Angeles Dodgers' single-season franchise record previously held by Ohtani's 54. The record-setting homer came in the seventh inning against Gabe Speier on a two-strike, 95 mph fastball that traveled 412 feet with a 109.5 mph exit velocity, putting the Dodgers up 6-0. Ohtani became the first player in MLB history to finish a season with exactly 55 homers and extended his mark for most homers in a season by a player who also made multiple pitching starts. He has 109 homers in his first two Dodgers seasons, tying Alex Rodriguez for second-most and trailing Babe Ruth's 113.
Read at Dodger Blue
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