Baseball 2012: The game's best off-beat, under-the-radar statistics and trivia

Fascinating baseball firsts and notable statistics can easily be missed in the playing of more than 2,000 big-league games each year. Here are the most intriguing developments that possibly escaped your notice.

4. Sensational start

Lenny Ignelzi/AP
San Diego Padres' Yasmani Grandal hits an RBI single against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the seventh inning of a baseball game, Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012, in San Diego.

Yasmani Grandal, a rookie catcher with the San Diego Padres, became the first player to ever collect the first hits of his major league career by homering from both sides of the plate in the same game.

Backstory: Since 1974, five other players have had multihomer games in their major-league debuts, but Grandal, who was brought up from Triple-A Tucson, became the first to do it batting both right- and left-handed.

There was a time when such clouts at Denver’s Coors Field might have been discounted because of the thin air, but since balls are now stored in a humidor Coors is no longer the home run haven it once was. 

In Grandal’s second game with the Padres, he started off 0-for-3, but then hit another home run, making his first three major-league hits all four-baggers. He finished the season with eight home runs.

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