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Giancarlo Stanton becomes Marlins’ all-time HR leader

Stanton, just 25, passed Dan Uggla on the team’s homer list.

Anthony Gruppuso-USA TODAY Sports

Miami Marlins outfielder Giancarlo Stanton became the franchise's all-time home run leader with a two-run shot off of New York Mets starter Dillon Gee in the first inning of a contest between the NL East rivals on Thursday.

Stanton's homer was his first of 2015 and the 155th of his career. The 25-year-old, sixth-year star passed Dan Uggla, who hit 154 homers in five seasons with the Marlins.

Stanton, the recipient of a 13-year, $325 million contract during the offseason, has hit a homer in four consecutive games against the Mets. He made his second All-Star team last season, which he finished with a .288/.395/.555 line and 37 home runs. Stanton finished second in the NL MVP voting and might have won if not for missing the final 17 games of the season after being hit in the face with a pitch by Mike Fiers of the Milwaukee Brewers.

Prior to Uggla becoming the Marlins' home run leader, Mike Lowell held the club record with 143 homers from 1999-2005.

Here’s a list of the career home run leaders for each MLB franchise:

AL team NL team
Baltimore Orioles Cal Ripken, 431 Arizona Diamondbacks Luis Gonzalez, 224
Boston Red Sox Ted Williams, 521 Atlanta Braves Hank Aaron, 733
Chicago White Sox Frank Thomas, 448 Chicago Cubs Sammy Sosa, 545
Cleveland Indians Jim Thome, 337 Cincinnati Reds Johnny Bench, 389
Detroit Tigers Al Kaline, 399 Colorado Rockies Todd Helton, 369
Houston Astros Jeff Bagwell, 449 Los Angeles Dodgers Duke Snider, 389
Kansas City Royals George Brett, 317 Miami Marlins Giancarlo Stanton, 155
Los Angeles Angels Tim Salmon, 299 Milwaukee Brewers Robin Yount, 251
Minnesota Twins Harmon Killebrew, 559 New York Mets Darryl Strawberry, 252
New York Yankees Babe Ruth, 659 Philadelphia Phillies Mike Schmidt, 548
Oakland Athletics Mark McGwire, 363 Pittsburgh Pirates Willie Stargell, 475
Seattle Mariners Ken Griffey Jr., 417 San Diego Padres Nate Colbert, 163
Tampa Bay Rays Evan Longoria, 185 San Francisco Giants Willie Mays, 646
Texas Rangers Juan Gonzalez, 372 St. Louis Cardinals Stan Musial, 475
Toronto Blue Jays Carlos Delgado, 336 Washington Nationals Vladimir Guerrero, 234
See More:

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