
Yandy Díaz made rare MLB history Thursday night with his two hits as the Tampa Bay Rays defeated the Boston Red Sox, taking him to a milestone that further cemented the veteran DH’s remarkable late-career rise.
Of the 402 Cuban-born players who have appeared in Major League Baseball across the sport’s history, only 19 had crossed the 1,000-hit threshold before Thursday. A single and a double for Díaz made him the 20th, with an even 1,000 hits, the Rays quickly announced. The achievement places Díaz in elite company among the more than 400 Cuban-born players to appear in Major League Baseball, underscoring both his consistency and longevity during an era dominated by power-focused offensive profiles.
Díaz’s 1,000th Hit Arrives at the Right Moment
The Tampa Bay Rays confirmed the achievement on social media Thursday, writing that Díaz had become “the 20th Cuban-born player in major league history to reach 1,000 hits,” according to the Tampa Bay Rays official social media account.
The pair of Díaz hits helped the Rays to their seventh win in a row, and 13th in their last 14 games. The 34-year-old native of Sagua la Grande, Villa Clara, Cuba, is having arguably his most consistent season since his 2023 American League batting title. His 2026 line entering Thursday was a .318 batting average, .401 on-base percentage, .874 OPS and five home runs in 34 games. That put him on pace for an MVP-candidate campaign.
For a player who spent two seasons with the Cleveland Guardians before finding his footing in Tampa Bay, the milestone reflects staying power that was never guaranteed. Díaz debuted April 3, 2017, and has spent the bulk of his career as one of the Rays’ most dependable offensive contributors.
Yandy Díaz Among Greatest Cuban Players in MLB History
The Cuban-born 1,000-hit fraternity is a short list dominated by Hall of Famers and franchise cornerstones. Topping it is Rafael Palmeiro, the only Cuban-born player to reach 3,000 career hits, with 3,020. Tony Pérez follows at 2,732, with Bert Campaneris (2,249), Minnie Miñoso (2,113), and Tony Taylor (2,007) rounding out the top five, according to CubaHeadlines reporter Ava Castillo.
Díaz’s entry at No. 20 on that list is built on a foundation of elite contact skills rather than raw power. His career .291 average across 938 games owes more to plate discipline than raw power. His .373 career on-base percentage reflects a walk rate that has consistently ranked among the better marks on Tampa Bay’s roster.
His best individual season came in 2023, when he won the American League batting crown at .330. The 2025 campaign was also strong, with a .300 average, 83 RBI, and 29 doubles. The Rays exercised a $12 million option to bring him back for 2026, with a further $13 million club option for 2027 contingent on Díaz reaching 500 plate appearances this season.
That mark seems assured. At his current pace, Díaz would need to play only 115 games to reach 500 plate appearances. He has not played fewer than 134 since 2020, when he appeared in only 34 games in that abbreviated season.
Thursday’s win left Tampa Bay just a half-game behind the AL East-leading New York Yankees. That’s an impressive achievement considering that the Yankees’ projected $308 million 2026 payroll, third-highest in baseball, is more than 3 1/2 times as high as Tampa Bay’s $87 million. That sum ranks the Rays 28th of the 30 MLB teams.
For Díaz, the two-hit night that delivered history was entirely in keeping with who he has been for nearly a decade — a hitter who shows up, stays healthy, and puts the ball in play.



Yandy Diaz Makes Rare MLB History in Rays Win Over Red Sox