The Infamous Golden Sombrero

The Award for Strikeouts

Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew

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When a baseball player is having a rough day at the plate and just can’t hit the ball, they’re given this term for the result of their performance.

The award is called a golden sombrero, and it’s the term given to a player that has struck out four times in a single game. The term comes from hockey’s hat trick, the feat when a player scores three goals in a single game. A batter that strikes out three times is given just a sombrero, but when they do it four times, it becomes a golden sombrero. But the award doesn’t end there. When a player strikes out five times in a game, it is called a platinum sombrero (and was once also known as getting the “Olympic Rings), and when it is done a dreaded six times in a game, the player receives a titanium sombrero.

The origin of the term golden sombrero is widely accepted to have been coined by Carmelo Martinez of the San Diego Padres in 1984 and that the term first appeared in print the same year from a quote by Leon Durham of the Chicago Cubs. But further research shows that the term was described in the Clarion-Ledger in August 1979, so it appears it was circulating in baseball circles prior to 1984. The term was also found to be used by a baseball player before Leon Durham’s use of it in April 1984 in the Chicago Tribune. In August 1983, in the Detroit Free Press

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Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew

The writer, editor, and chief lackey of Knowledge Stew and the Knowledge Stew line of trivia books. Connect at knowledgestew.com and danielganninger.com