On a night already packed with headlines in San Diego, Freeman delivered yet another reminder of his greatness by blasting two doubles against the Padres, officially reaching 560 career doubles — tying Hall of Famers Eddie Murray and Jeff Kent for 30th place on Major League Baseball’s all-time doubles leaderboard.
And suddenly, what once looked like a remarkable career is beginning to look historic.
For Dodgers fans, the moment carried extra emotional weight. Both Murray and Kent spent important stretches of their careers in Los Angeles. Now Freeman, wearing the same iconic uniform, has joined them in one of baseball’s most exclusive offensive clubs.
But perhaps the most astonishing part of the story is how naturally Freeman arrived here.
No controversy. No dramatic reinvention. No desperate chase for milestones.
Just line drives. Gap shots. Consistency. Year after year after year.
Some hitters are remembered for towering home runs. Others for speed or defensive brilliance.
Freddie Freeman has built his legacy through pure hitting mastery.
The double has become his signature weapon — the perfect reflection of his smooth left-handed swing, elite bat control, and ability to drive the baseball to every part of the field. According to recent Dodgers coverage, Freeman’s first four years in Los Angeles alone produced 180 doubles, the highest four-year doubles total in franchise history.
That number is staggering when placed beside the legends who have worn Dodger blue.
And the timing makes it even more remarkable.

At 36 years old, Freeman is not slowing down. Through the first 50 games of the 2026 season, he already has 13 doubles and is currently on pace for another 40-plus doubles campaign — something he has already accomplished five different times in his career.
Most players decline at this stage.
Freeman appears to be refining himself.
In a lineup filled with global superstars like Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts, Freeman somehow continues to be the Dodgers’ emotional stabilizer.
When the offense struggles, he delivers professional at-bats.
When pressure rises, he controls the strike zone.
When the team needs consistency, Freeman becomes inevitable.
His recent surge has been especially dominant. Reports note that he has collected eight extra-base hits over his last 14 games, including consecutive games with multiple extra-base hits — something no Dodger had accomplished since Betts last September.
Inside the Dodgers clubhouse, Freeman’s value now extends far beyond statistics.
He has become the organizational standard.
What makes this milestone even more fascinating is that Freeman may not be done climbing anytime soon.
After tying Murray and Kent at 560 doubles, the next target is Carlos Beltrán at 565. And based on Freeman’s current pace, that mark could disappear within days.
Even larger milestones are rapidly approaching:
- Only seven more doubles away from 200 as a Dodger
- Just 33 extra-base hits away from 1,000 career extra-base hits
- Continuing his climb toward the inner circle of offensive greatness
The numbers now place Freeman in conversations once reserved for baseball royalty.
And perhaps the most chilling detail of all is this: statistically, Freeman’s career trajectory has mirrored Eddie Murray’s almost perfectly through much of their primes. Analysts have repeatedly pointed to Murray as Freeman’s closest historical comparison across multiple age ranges.
Now they are tied on the all-time doubles list too.
Baseball history has a strange way of repeating itself.
Freeman’s résumé was already Cooperstown-worthy before this season began.
- Multiple World Series titles
- National League MVP
- World Series MVP honors
- Nine-time All-Star selections
- Nearly 2,500 career hits
- One of the most respected hitters of his generation
But milestones like this transform great careers into immortal ones.

The all-time doubles leaderboard is filled with legends whose swings defined eras of baseball — names like Chipper Jones, Derek Jeter, Tony Gwynn, and Manny Ramirez. Freeman has already passed several of them in recent months.
And he is still climbing.
That may ultimately become Freeman’s defining trait.
He does not dominate headlines with controversy. He rarely seeks attention. He is not baseball’s loudest superstar.
Instead, he simply keeps producing at an elite level with a calmness that almost disguises the magnitude of what he is accomplishing.
Night after night, swing after swing, double after double, Freddie Freeman is building one of the greatest offensive careers modern baseball has ever seen.
And now, standing beside Eddie Murray and Jeff Kent on one of MLB’s most historic lists, the Dodgers superstar is no longer just adding statistics.
He is carving his name permanently into baseball history.