Rafael Palmeiro arrived in Baltimore in 1994 as a finished product—a smooth-swinging first baseman with a surgical approach to the plate. Despite playing in an era crowded with legendary power hitters, Palmeiro’s five-season run in the 1990s stands as one of the most consistently productive offensive stretches in Orioles history.
From 1994 to 1998, Palmeiro was a fixture in the American League leaderboards. He finished in the top ten in home runs every single year of his first Baltimore stint, providing the thunder for the 1996 and 1997 postseason teams. His 1996 campaign was a statistical peak, during which he batted .289 with 39 home runs and 142 RBIs, finishing sixth in the MVP voting. He earned the Silver Slugger in 1998 and received MVP votes in every season of his first run, cementing his status as the premier offensive engine of the lineup.
After a period in Texas, Palmeiro returned to the Orioles in 2004 to chase history. In 2005, he achieved the ultra-rare milestone of joining the 3,000 Hit / 500 Home Run Club in an Orioles uniform. However, the celebration was short-lived. Just ten days after his 3,000th hit, and only months after his infamous congressional testimony, Palmeiro was suspended for PED use.
The fallout from 2005 cast a long shadow over a career that included 1,071 hits, 223 home runs, and a massive .520 slugging percentage in Baltimore






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