TL;DR The Subway Series has seen 152 games since 1997, showcasing remarkable performances from players like David Wright and Francisco Lindor. As the Mets and Yankees prepare for their next matchup, a review of the series' record book highlights standout achievements.
UNITED STATES - MAY 19: Joyous New York Mets mob third baseman David Wright (3rd left) after Wright hit an RBI walkoff single off New York Yankees' closer Mariano Rivera in the bottom of the ninth, with two out, to score catcher Paul Lo Duca and give the Mets a 7-6 victory over the Yankees at Shea Stadium. The Mets won the first game of the Subway Series, but the rival teams will battle it out twice more over the weekend. (Photo by Corey Sipkin/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images) | NY Daily News via Getty Images
UNITED STATES - MAY 19: Joyous New York Mets mob third baseman David Wright (3rd left) after Wright hit an RBI walkoff single off New York Yankees ' closer Mariano Rivera in the bottom of the ninth, with two out, to score catcher Paul Lo Duca and give the Mets a 7-6 victory over the Yankees at Shea Stadium. The Mets won the first game of the Subway Series, but the rival teams will battle it out twice more over the weekend. (Photo by Corey Sipkin/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images) | NY Daily News via Getty Images
Since the arrival of interleague play in 1997, there have been nearly a regular seasonâs worth of regular season games played between the New York Mets and the New York Yankees. These 152 games have included some of the many feats and oddities youâd expect from a seasonâs worth of play, from three-homer games to wacky walk-offs to proper routs. Theyâve also seen certain players distinguish themselves from the pack, whether for specific in-game accomplishments or cumulative totals.
As another edition of the Subway Series is set to beginâthis time featuring a whole new cast of Mets ready to make their mark on the crosstown rivalryâit seems a fitting moment to check in on the state of the seriesâ record book, from all-time leaders to single-game leaders to Statcast superlatives. This is by no means an exhaustive list, but rather a sampling of some of the standout highlights. So letâs hop on board, stand clear of the closing doors, and take a brief ride through 29 seasons of Subway Series baseballâŠ
**Most Hits, GAME*** (5) â June 26, 2009*
Rookie Brett Gardner gave Citi Field a rude introduction to the Subway Series. The 25-year-old hit leadoff, going 5-for-6 with three singles, a double, and a late homer off Elmer Dessens in the veteran right-handerâs second game as a Met. Pesky as ever, all three of Gardnerâs singles came on softly-hit flairs which found grass just beyond the infield, while his homer barely cleared the fence in the right-field corner. The Metsâ only offense in the 9-1 loss came courtesy of Gary Sheffieldâs 509th (and penultimate) career home run.
**Most Home Runs, GAME**
* (3) â September 12, 2021*
The only three-homer game in Subway Series history belongs to Francisco Lindor, who accomplished the feat in the midst of a relatively underwhelming first season in Flushing. Lindor carried a .222 average and .696 OPS into the night, but all that seemed to disappear as he hit a trio of clutch homers (two of them putting the Mets in the lead) during an emotional subway series on the 20th anniversary of September 11, 2001. Lindor got his first curtain call, his first of many iconic Mets moments, and his only career three-homer game to date.
**Most RBI, GAME**
*Carlos Delgado (9) â September 27, 2008*
Forget Subway Series records â Carlos Delgadoâs nine-RBI effort in the first game of a doubleheader at Yankee Stadium tied a Mets *franchise* record. As if that wasnât impressive enough, he tallied all his RBI in just four innings. In the top of the fifth, he laced a two-run single. In the sixth, he crushed a grand slam to the back of the bleachers in right-center field. In the eighth, he punctuated the performance with a three-run homer off future Met .
**Most Strikeouts, GAME**
*Jacob deGrom (12) â August 13, 2018 / Dillon Gee (12) â May 30, 2013*
Both of these 12-strikeout performances came on the road at Yankee Stadium, and contrary to what you might guess, was actually far more dominant than âs. The 2018 Cy Young Award winner allowed three runs (two of them earned) on five hits and two walks in 6.2 innings of work, while Gee went 7.1 innings and allowed just one run on a solo shot from .
Gee has another entry on the Subway Series leaderboard, as his start on July 2, 2011 is tied with âs on September 10, 2021 for most whiffs (18) by a Met, but has them both beat with 22 on May 14, 2014. The day after that Tanaka masterpiece, the Yankees were set to face Geeâs spot in the Metsâ rotation, but the right-hander went down with a lat strain. The Yankees instead faced a 26-year-old making his MLB debut namedâŠJacob deGrom. In classic deGrom fashion, he ended up on the short end of a 1-0 pitchersâ duel. It was the first 1-0 finale in Subway Series history, and the only one to date.
**Most Hits, CAREER**
*1. Derek Jeter (131)
2. Alex Rodriguez (65)
3. David Wright (62)
4. Robinson CanĂł (61)
5. Brett Gardner/José Reyes (53)*
Jeter laps the field here. Literally. His 131 Subway Series hits are more than double any other playerâs total, accumulated over 88 games played (which also rank first). , Wright, and CanĂł are neck-and-neck in the battle for second place, with 7 of CanĂłâs 61 hits coming in a Mets uniform. But just as predictable as Jeterâs ranking atop this leaderboard was Wrightâs ranking atop the Metsâ side. The 12th of his 62 hits, a soaring single to straightaway center off Mariano Rivera, represented one of the most memorable walk-offs in franchise history,
**Most Home Runs, CAREER**
*1. Aaron Judge (14)
2. Derek Jeter/Alex Rodriguez (13)
3. Jorge Posada (12)
4. Pete Alonso/Robinson CanĂł/Curtis Granderson/Mark Teixeira (11)*
Judgeâs solo homer off on July 3 last season moved him into a tie with and A-Rod, and his two-run homer off two days later made him the Subway Seriesâ new home run king. Alonso was climbing up the leaderboard at a breakneck pace, clubbing 11 homers in 32 games against the Bombers. This likely would have been a two-man race for years to come if Alonso had returned to the Mets, but instead he has taken his Yankee-killing talents to , picking up right where he left off with a pair of homers in his first series back in the Bronx earlier this month. That leaves Judge to continue adding to his total relatively unthreatened. CanĂł and , meanwhile, sneak into the leaderboard with help from stints on both side of the rivalry.
**Most Stolen Bases, CAREER**
*1. Derek Jeter (19)
2. José Reyes (14)
3. Roger Cedeño/Alfonso Soriano (9)
5. David Wright (8)*
This is a Roger Cedeño stat. Jeter, Reyes, and Wright all had over 200 Subway Series plate appearances to climb their way onto this leaderboard. Soriano had 99. Cedeño had 71. In 17 Subway Series games, Cedeño slashed .323/.371/.492. Five of his nine stolen bases came during 1999 (a season in which he swiped 66 bags for the Mets) and one of those five was a steal of home. The other four came in his second stint in New York from â02-â03. Still, the accumulators win out, with Jeter and Reyes unsurprisingly leading the pack.
**Most Saves, CAREER**
*1. Mariano Rivera (20)
2. Armando BenĂtez/Edwin DĂaz/Billy Wagner (5)
5. Aroldis Chapman/Francisco RodrĂguez (4)*
Behind Rivera, who accounts for over 25% of saves recorded for *either* side in Subway Series history, a trio of Mets closers are tied for second place despite varying degrees of effectiveness. Wagner pitched to a 4.66 ERA in 9.2 IP, BenĂtez maintained a respectable 3.00 ERA in 15 IP, and DĂaz was absolutely dominant, posting an 0.96 ERA with 19 strikeouts in 9.1 IP. A pair of fireballers in Chapman and RodrĂguez are tied at fifth. The players with the most likely chance to enter the leaderboard this season are ex-Yankees and , each of whom picked up a Subway Series save against the Mets last season.
**Longest-projected Home Run** (Statcast era/since 2015)
*1. Aaron Judge ( ) â August 16, 2017
2. Aaron Judge ( ) â August 23, 2022 / Gary SĂĄnchez ( ) â August 30, 2020
4. Giancarlo Stanton ( ) â September 12, 2021 / Juan Soto ( ) â July 24, 2024
6. Francisco Lindor ( ) â September 12, 2021*
Judgeâs mammoth 457-foot blast off on August 16, 2017 landed in the third deck in left field, and landed him a share of the tenth spot on the list of longest homers hit at Citi Field (his teammate Stanton has the on that list). Lindorâs second homer in his three-homer game sits at sixth as the highest Mets entry on this leaderboard, one of two dingers included from that game along with Stantonâs game-tying shot a half inning later. Judge and SĂĄnchez split second place, each with a homer well up the left-center-field bleachers at Yankee Stadium (though for SĂĄnchezâs homer, a go-ahead grand slam off in August 2020, the bleachers were eerily empty). Soto, meanwhile, ranks with a moonshot to Monument Park off future teammate .
**Fastest Pitch** (Pitch-tracking era/since 2008)
*1. Aroldis Chapman ( ) â August 15, 2017
2. Aroldis Chapman ( ) â June 9, 2018
3. Aroldis Chapman ( ) *â June 9, 2018*
4. Aroldis Chapman ( ) *â June 9, 2018*
5. Aroldis Chapman ( ) *â June 9, 2018*
6. Bobby Parnell ( ) â July 1, 2011*
The five fastest pitches all belong to Chapman, with four of those coming in one inning to a trio of 2018 Mets including , , and . But the single fastest pitch he threw in a Subway Series game resulted in a game-ending grounder off the bat of ten months earlier. The sixth-fastest (and top ranked by a Met) belongs to , who recorded whatâs listed as a 101.1 mph fastball to strike out and end the top of the eighth inning in a Mets loss. You wouldnât be wrong though to look quizzically at this listing; itâs the only pitch Parnell threw in his career which registered higher than 100.4 mph, meaning that if the 101.1 mph reading is correct, he would have had to dial it up 0.7 mph on this pitch and this pitch alone.
**Biggest Wins**
*1.* *Yankees 15, Mets 0 â*
*2. Mets 12, Yankees 2 â / *Mets 12, Yankees 2 â* *
June 14, 2009 was not âs day. The left-hander entered the start with a 2.39 ERA and exited with a 3.29 ERA after allowing nine runs in three innings of work. The Yankees didnât stop there, racking up four more runs off Brian Stokes and getting another pair off Jon Switzer, marking the third-to-last outing of the latterâs career. Jeter went 4-for-4, while Hideki Matsui and Robinson CanĂł both went deep. Somehow, it was not the Metsâ most deflating loss of the series, as two days earlier an infamous pop-up popped in and out of the glove of Luis Castillo. But the Mets have more Subway Series wins by a 10+ margin, with 12-2 victories in 2000 and 2024. Each featured a trio of homers â the first from Mike Piazza, Edgardo Alfonzo, and Derek Bell, and the second from Francisco Alvarez, , and . The first game also came in an Al Leiter/Roger Clemens pitchersâ duel which turned out one-sided.
**Longest/Shortest Games**
*Longest: Yankees 4, Mets 2 (f/10) (4 hours, 36 minutes) â
Shortest: Yankees 4, Mets 2 (f/7) (2 hours, 14 minutes) â *
Thereâs a cruel irony in the fact that the longest and shortest games in Subway Series history â two polar opposite games in some respects â ended up with the exact same result. The â02 marathonâs length was no doubt aided by Mets starter Steve Trachsel, often referred to as âThe Human Rain Delayâ for his slow pitching pace. The Mets led 2-0 at Shea Stadium by virtue of a walk and passed ball in the third inning, but the Yankees clawed back with an RBI single from Bernie Williams in the eighth and another by Derek Jeter in the ninth to tie it. A homer from then-Yankee Robin Ventura in the top of the tenth was the deciding factor. The â21 sprint was aided by the short-lived seven-inning-doubleheader rule, allowing the low-offense contest (the two teams combined for seven total hits in seven innings) to conclude abruptly when the seventh-inning stretch would normally occur.
**Walk-Off Wins**
*Mets: 10 ( , , , , , , \ , , )* *Yankees: 5 ( , , , \ = walk-off home run*
If thereâs one area of the Subway Series where the Mets have properly outdone the Yankees, itâs walk-offs. The Mets have twice as many walk-off victories as the Bronx Bombers, with the total reaching double digits as of âs double off in June 2023.
But I close the journey through Subway Series records with this stat not only for its uplifting Mets slant, but also because there is one related feat still up for grabs: no player has racked up multiple Subway Series walk-offs.
This season, thereâs a prime candidate in , who oddly enough already has a walk-off at Yankee Stadium *against* the Yankees during a chaotic covid scheduling snafu. Has anyone ever had a walk-off hit for and against the same team in the same stadium? Some citiesâ teams shared ballparks back in the early 20th century, but those teams were divided by league in a time before interleague play. It would come at the cost of a Mets win, but if Rosario pulled it off, he could earn himself a distinction in baseball history as well as Subway Series history.