Freeman Reaches 2,500 Career Hits in Blowout Win Over Pirates
Last updated: June 10, 2026 5:05 PM UTC
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CONFIRMEDFreddie Freeman recorded his 2,500th career hit on Friday, lining an RBI single to center field off Brandan Bidois during the Dodgers’ 12-3 rout of the Pittsburgh Pirates, per staff at DodgerBlue.com. The hit came as part of a massive 10-run inning, and Freeman became just the 102nd player in MLB history to reach the milestone. “It means a lot,” Freeman said after the game.
Freeman’s path to 2,500 hits has been one of the more quietly remarkable careers of his generation. He came up with the Atlanta Braves in 2010, won the NL MVP in 2020 during that shortened season, then helped lead Atlanta to its first World Series title since 1995 in 2021. He signed with the Dodgers ahead of the 2022 season on a six-year deal and immediately became the heartbeat of this lineup. In his first year in Los Angeles, he hit .325 and helped the team win 111 games. He followed that by playing through a bone spur in his right elbow during the 2023 postseason and was instrumental in the Dodgers’ 2024 World Series championship run, where his grand slam in Game 1 against the Yankees is already the stuff of franchise legend. The consistency has never wavered — Freeman has been an All-Star multiple times, a Gold Glove winner, and a Silver Slugger recipient, and he’s done it all without ever being the loudest guy in the room.
Reaching 2,500 hits puts Freeman in genuinely elite company. The list of players who’ve gotten there is short and filled with Hall of Famers. At his current pace and with at least another year on his contract, 3,000 hits isn’t a fantasy — it’s a real conversation. He’s been durable, he’s been productive, and he’s done it across two franchises in two different leagues. That kind of longevity doesn’t happen by accident.
The context of the milestone matters too. It didn’t come in some quiet Tuesday loss — it came during a 10-run explosion that turned a game against Pittsburgh into a laugher. That’s been the story of this Dodgers offense when it’s clicking: everyone contributes, and Freeman is usually right in the middle of it, doing damage from the left side of the plate and keeping the line moving. He’s not a stat-chaser. He’s a winning player who accumulates numbers because he shows up every day and competes.
For us as Dodgers fans, we get to watch a future Hall of Famer add to his resume in our uniform. That’s not something to take for granted. Freeman has embraced Los Angeles completely since arriving, and moments like this — quiet milestones reached in the middle of big wins — are what make following this team on a daily basis rewarding. I don’t think we need to overthink what 2,500 hits means. It means he’s been one of the best hitters in baseball for a very long time, and he’s ours.
Source(s): Staff (DodgerBlue.com) | First reported: June 10, 2026 5:05 PM UTC
God Bless and Go Dodgers
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