Four Hits, One Night: The 2026 MLB Cycle Tracker
Hitting for the cycle still feels like baseball cheating itself for one night, because the triple remains the gatekeeper. The tracker opens with the 2026 season starting March 25 at Oracle Park, Giants versus Yankees, with Netflix carrying the standalone opener, and it uses that stage to frame how a cycle can appear out of routine chaos.
The page lays out what it will log as cycles happen in 2026. Each entry will capture opponent, ballpark, final score, hit order, and timing, then add Statcast and sprint speed context to explain the hardest ninety feet. It also notes MLB’s Elias based count of 350 total cycles and flags how record keeping keeps evolving, including Negro Leagues integration and ongoing research.
To set the tone, it runs through memorable modern cycles, from Trea Turner’s speed burst to Brock Holt’s postseason first, Christian Yelich going six for six, and Elly De La Cruz detonating a 116.6 mile per hour double inside his feat. The point is simple: somewhere in 2026, the next one will form.
Track MLB players who hit for the cycle in 2026 with context, Statcast clues, video, the history behind baseball’s hardest four hit night.















