The stolen base is one of the most exciting plays in baseball, a pure test of speed, timing, and nerve. Some players have built entire Hall of Fame careers on their legs, and the single-season totals from the game’s greatest base stealers are almost hard to believe by today’s standards. So who has led the majors in steals each year, and how have the numbers changed across eras?
The leaderboard tells the story of the sport itself, from the dead-ball era when steals were a primary weapon, through the long power-hitting lull when running fell out of fashion, to a recent revival driven by new rules. One name towers over all of it.
The chart below tracks the MLB stolen base leader for every season of the modern era, with the player, team, and total. Take a look, then we’ll dig into the records and the stories.
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The Greatest Base Stealer Ever
No discussion of stolen bases starts anywhere but Rickey Henderson. He led the majors in steals in a remarkable number of seasons during the 1980s and into the 1990s, and his 1982 total of 130 stolen bases is the single-season record that may never be broken. To put that in perspective, in most recent seasons the league leader has finished somewhere between 40 and 70. Henderson also holds the career record by a massive margin, and he is the standard against which every speedster is measured.
The Single-Season Records
The biggest single-season totals nearly all come from a different era of baseball. Henderson’s 130 in 1982 leads the modern era, followed by Lou Brock’s 118 in 1974 and Vince Coleman’s eye-popping totals in the mid-1980s, when Coleman swiped over 100 bases in three straight seasons. Before that, the dead-ball era stars like Ty Cobb piled up huge numbers in a low-scoring game where manufacturing runs was everything. These totals stand in stark contrast to the modern game and show just how much the role of the stolen base has shifted.
The Long Decline
For decades, the stolen base faded from the game. As home runs and on-base percentage came to dominate strategy in the 2000s and 2010s, teams decided the risk of running was not worth the reward, and league-leading totals dropped into the 40s and 50s. A leader who once needed 80 or 90 steals to top the list could now win the crown with fewer than 50. The art of the stolen base, once central to winning baseball, had nearly become a relic.
The Modern Revival
That changed suddenly in 2023, when MLB introduced a set of rule changes including the pitch clock, limits on pickoff throws, and larger bases. The effect was dramatic: stolen bases surged leaguewide, and Ronald Acuña Jr. swiped 73 to lead the majors, the most by any player since 2007. The next year, Cincinnati’s Elly De La Cruz led with 67, and the running game returned as a real weapon. After years of decline, speed is back in style, even if no one is approaching Henderson’s old records.
Interesting Stolen Base Facts
The history of the stolen base is full of remarkable details. Ty Cobb stole home a record 54 times in his career, a feat almost unimaginable today. Rickey Henderson’s 130 steals in a single season is more than most modern teams record as a group in some years. The 2023 rule changes produced the most stolen bases in a season since 1987, a jump of more than 40 percent in just one year. And only a tiny group of players, including Acuña and De La Cruz, have ever combined big power with 60-plus steals in the same season. If you enjoy baseball record lists, see our breakdown of the longest MLB winning streak.
The Bottom Line
The MLB stolen base leaderboard runs from the dead-ball era through Rickey Henderson’s untouchable peak to the modern revival sparked by the 2023 rule changes. Henderson’s 130 steals in 1982 remains the modern record, and his dominance across so many seasons makes him the greatest base stealer the game has ever seen. The stolen base has come and gone as a weapon over the decades, but with speed back in fashion, the leaderboard is exciting to watch once again.