A Triple Crown in baseball is when one player leads their league in all three offensive categories — batting average, home runs, and runs batted in (RBIs) — in the same season. It’s one of the rarest feats in all of sports. Across baseball history (including MLB, Negro Leagues, and other major leagues), it has happened just 27 times.
In Major League Baseball alone, only 14 players have ever done it — and just 5 of those came in the modern era (1947-present). The last Triple Crown winner was Miguel Cabrera in 2012, meaning we’ve now gone 13+ seasons without one. Here’s every Triple Crown winner in baseball history, plus the modern near-misses and why it’s so hard to win.
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Why the Triple Crown is so rare
The Triple Crown is rare because the skill set required is contradictory. Batting average rewards contact hitters who put the ball in play frequently and avoid strikeouts. Home runs reward power hitters who swing for elevation and can live with higher strikeout rates.
RBIs require you to hit in a lineup spot with runners on base AND be able to drive them in — which usually means batting third or fourth and hitting for both power and average.
A great contact hitter (think Luis Arraez) rarely has 40+ HR power. A pure power hitter (think Aaron Judge in 2022, Adam Dunn in his prime) rarely hits .330+. The Triple Crown winner needs to be elite at both ends of the offensive spectrum in the same season — a player profile that surfaces maybe once every 30-50 years in MLB history.
The modern era near-misses
Three players have come within a whisker of the Triple Crown in the post-2012 era. Aaron Judge in 2022 led the AL in home runs (62) and RBIs (131), but finished .005 points behind Luis Arraez (.316 vs .311) for the batting title — the closest miss in decades.
Christian Yelich in 2018 won the NL batting title at .326, finished 2 home runs behind Nolan Arenado, and 1 RBI behind Javier Báez. Aaron Judge again in 2024 led MLB in home runs (58) and RBIs (144) but lost the batting title to Bobby Witt Jr. (.332 to Judge’s .322).
Then in 2025, Judge won his first batting title but didn’t lead in HR or RBI. That’s three different Judge near-misses in four seasons — the modern Triple Crown story is essentially the Aaron Judge story.
The Negro Leagues recognition
In December 2020, MLB officially elevated the seven Negro Leagues (1920-1948) to Major League status. That decision retroactively folded all Negro League statistics into the MLB record book — meaning the all-time Triple Crown count technically grew from 16 (the old “MLB-only” total) to 27 (including all major leagues).
Oscar Charleston (3 Triple Crowns), Josh Gibson (2 Triple Crowns), Mule Suttles, Willie Wells, Heavy Johnson, Lennie Pearson, and Ted Strong are now officially recognized as Triple Crown winners alongside Ted Williams, Lou Gehrig, and Miguel Cabrera. Ted Williams and Rogers Hornsby remain the only players in the strict-MLB count to win it twice, while Oscar Charleston (1921, 1924, 1925) holds the all-leagues record at three.
Why no Triple Crown in 13+ years
The 13-year drought (and counting) since Cabrera’s 2012 mark is the longest stretch without a Triple Crown winner since the 45-year gap between Yastrzemski (1967) and Cabrera. Several factors make it harder than ever now: pitchers throw harder than any era in history (MLB average fastball velocity exceeded 94 mph in 2024), defensive analytics position fielders optimally on every pitch, and the modern hitting approach trades batting average for power and walks.
The 2023 shift ban helped batting averages tick up slightly, and the 2023 pitch clock reduced pitcher dominance modestly, but the structural offensive environment still rewards specialization over balance.
The next Triple Crown winner will likely be a generational hitter like Judge or someone we haven’t seen yet — and it may take another decade to happen. For more on baseball’s modern offensive era, see our guides on exit velocity benchmarks and how the MLB pitch clock changed the game.
— Drew, Legion Report