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In just his fourth year in the major leagues, Pete Alonso continues to set Mets history.

This year, the record he’s chasing is the franchise’s single-season RBI mark, and it looks like he will absolutely shatter it.

Mike Piazza (1999) and David Wright (2004) both recorded 124 RBIs in one season, with Alonso’s rookie season trailing closely behind with 120 runs knocked in.

But through 74 team games this year, Alonso has posted a league-high 69 RBIs. He’s on pace to finish the season with 153 RBIs. This would be tied for 35th all-time in MLB history for most RBIs by a player in a singular season. The others with 153 RBIs in a season: Tommy Davis (1962) and Babe Ruth (1926, 1930).

The crazy part about Alonso? He’s driving in runs in all kinds of ways.

To put his dominance in perspective, he’s not simply getting more RBIs than anyone other player, although he does leader slugger Paul Goldschmidt, who sits second in the stat, by five RBIs. Alonso is also rising above his competition in the most important of situations. A prime example is his 60 RBIs with runners on base, with is 11 more than any other player.

He’s also clutch and keeps innings alive. Over 36% of Alonso’s RBIs (25) have come with two outs in an inning, showcasing his ability to prolong innings by manufacturing runs even with his teams’ back against the wall. Specifically, five of his RBIs have been in “late and close situations.”

Alonso displays resilience in battling back from pitcher-friendly counts. When the pitcher is ahead in the count, Alonso has recorded 18.8% of his RBIs (13). Digging further into this stat, almost 30% of his RBIs have come with two strikes in the at-bat.

While he’s clutch, Alonso has a knack for starting things strong as well at the top of an inning. He’s led off an inning with a solo home run on six different occasions. In contrast, with three ducks on the pond, Alonso has cracked two grand slams, mostly recently on June 17 against the Marlins.

As good as Alonso has been as a pure hitter this year (33 extra base hits, .281 batting average), he still manages to drive in runs even without recording hits. His seven sacrifice flies leads the NL; one of his sacrifice fly RBIs even came by way of a fly ball out that was caught in foul territory.

When it comes to the time of game, it never matters what inning it is, Alonso has collected RBIs early, late, and all in between. He’s picked up at least 10 RBIs in the first, fifth, and sixth innings, with his 13 RBIs each in the fifth and sixth the most of any singular inning. Notably, he’s recorded just one RBI in the ninth inning, but that’s also a byproduct of the Mets not batting in many home ninth innings as they’ve won so many games with relative ease at Citi Field.

The Mets wound up with a truly special player in Alonso, who’s already made Mets history in his rookie campaign.

Now, he’s chasing more franchise records.