Baseball

Tennessee Volunteers Make History with 100th Home Run of the Season

The SEC program becomes the first to reach 100 home runs in five consecutive seasons, underscoring a historic offensive era.

On May 12, 2024, the Tennessee Volunteers erupted for an 11‑1 victory over Belmont, a moment that marked the team's 100th home run of the season. The blast, recorded in the fifth inning, capped an offensive onslaught that left the crowd at Lindsey Nelson Stadium chanting in disbelief.

A Historic Offensive Era

What makes the achievement even more remarkable is the consistency. Tennessee has now posted double‑digit home run totals for five straight years, a streak that began in 2022 and includes a program‑record 184 homers in the 2024 national championship season. Since the 2022 campaign, the Volunteers have compiled 704 round‑trippers, a figure that underscores a sustained power surge across multiple recruiting classes.

The offensive firepower is not limited to a single star. In 2024, five Volunteers cracked the 20‑home‑run barrier — Blake Burke, Christian Moore, Kavares Tears, Billy Amick and Dylan Dreiling — while Trey Lipscomb, who led the team with 22 homers in 2022 before moving to the Rochester Red Wings, remains a benchmark for the program’s developmental pipeline.

Despite the impressive numbers, the Volunteers sit at 35‑18 overall and 13‑14 within SEC play, a record that reflects both dominance and the competitive nature of the conference. Their next test arrives on May 14 when they travel to Oklahoma City to face the Oklahoma Sooners at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark, a venue that promises another high‑stakes showdown.

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