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Hank and Tommie Aaron combined for 768 home runs, 755 of which were by Hank. That's the most by any brother combination. As for the Dimagios, Joe had 361, Vince had 125, and Dom had 87, for a combined total of 573. The Alous were Matty (31), Jesus (32), and Felipe (206), for a total of 269.

2007-05-23 01:21:53 · answer #1 · answered by RAIN_DOGS99 3 · 3 0

Hank and Tommie Aaron hit 768 home runs. 755 of them belonged to Hank.

2007-05-23 11:00:47 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Got to be Hank and Tommie Aaron.

Thank goodness for the "edit" button. It was Felipe, Matty and Jesus Alou.

2007-05-23 08:03:52 · answer #3 · answered by Yinzer Power 6 · 0 0

It has to be Hank & Tommie Aaron. They are the Phil & Joe Neikro of hitting.

2007-05-23 09:10:08 · answer #4 · answered by kris d 2 · 0 0

i think, no, im certain, it would have to be the demagio brothers. joe's brother, i think his name was dom, short for whatever was a really good player too.

but for fun, check out the alou brothers who played in the 60's. there was 3 of em. felipe, jose, and manny i think. (i might be thinking of manny mota though) and of course one of them is moises dad...NOW that is a baseball family!

The youngest and smallest of the three DiMaggio brothers, the bespectacled centerfielder was a perennial All-Star with the Red Sox for 11 seasons, missing three years of his prime because of WWII. Twice DiMaggio, together with Ted Williams, was part of a .300-hitting outfield, once in his rookie year of 1940 with Doc Cramer in right field, and again 10 years later in 1950 with Al Zarilla in right. A slick fielder, fans used to yell that he played his own position as well as the slow-footed Williams's spot in left field. DiMaggio set the pace for consistency, hitting in 34 straight games in 1949, and another 27 straight in 1951, and scored more than 100 runs seven times. In the 1946 Series, he scored the deciding run in Game Five to give the Red Sox a 3-2 edge in the Series, eventually lost in seven games to the Cardinals on Enos Slaughter's dash for home. Twice DiMaggio led the league in at-bats from his leadoff spot, and twice in runs scored. He shared the outfield with brother Joe in three All-Star games, and drove him in with a single in the 1941 game. (ArB/SEW)


oops, with ALLL THAT being said, its the aarons.

2007-05-23 08:19:53 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Hank and Tommy Aaron
I hope this is correct.

2007-05-23 08:54:30 · answer #6 · answered by Michael M 7 · 0 0

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