Some guys play the percentages, choke up on two strikes, and settle for a bloop single. And then there are the guys on this list—players who didn’t care what the count was, where the pitch was going, or what the game situation called for.
They came to the plate with one goal: launch baseballs into orbit. Whether they struck out or sent it 450 feet didn’t matter—these were the ultimate “all gas, no brakes” hitters.
18. Pedro Alvarez

Alvarez wasn’t interested in slap hits or moving the runner—he wanted to crush baseballs into the Allegheny. When he connected, it was majestic; when he didn’t, well… it was still entertaining.
17. Mike Zunino

Zunino never met a pitch he didn’t think he could hit to the moon. The strikeouts piled up, but the home runs always kept him in the lineup.
16. Joey Gallo

If it wasn’t a bomb or a K, it was probably a walk—Gallo lived at the extreme ends of the hitting spectrum. Two-strike count? It didn’t matter. He was still swinging like it was 3-0.
15. Yasiel Puig

Puig’s approach was pure chaos, and he loved swinging from the heels no matter what. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t, but it was never boring.
14. Josh Hamilton

Hamilton had unreal power and wasn’t shy about unleashing it, no matter the situation. Even with two strikes, he still looked like he was trying to break the bat over the ball.
13. Richie Sexson

Sexson was built like a tree and swung like he was trying to chop one down. Even with a pitcher’s count, you knew he wasn’t about to play it safe.
12. Mark Reynolds

Reynolds had one gear, and it involved violent uppercuts and a lot of wind. His strikeout totals were historic, but so were some of those moonshots.
11. Khris Davis

Davis might have been the most consistent .247 hitter in history, but his swings were anything but predictable. He always looked ready to destroy the next pitch, no matter the count.
10. Giancarlo Stanton

When Stanton swings, it looks like he’s trying to launch the ball out of the stadium—and sometimes he does. Doesn’t matter if it’s 0-2 or 3-0, he’s always hacking.
9. Alfonso Soriano

Soriano never saw a pitch he didn’t think he could hit 500 feet. Even with two strikes, he refused to dial it back—and fans loved him for it.
8. Adam Dunn

Dunn’s swing was pure thunder, and he was more likely to whiff than walk—but he wasn’t changing a thing. His “three true outcomes” style made him a legend of the all-or-nothing approach.
7. Miguel Sano

Sano’s swing could end a ballgame—or an at-bat in three pitches. Subtlety wasn’t his thing, and he brought the same maximum effort to every count.
6. Juan Gonzalez

Gonzalez was hunting homers at all times, and pitchers knew it. Even when down in the count, he didn’t shorten up—he just swung harder.
5. Bryce Harper

Harper can crush a baseball, and he doesn’t wait around for the perfect pitch to do it. He’s aggressive, fiery, and always ready to take the biggest hack possible.
4. Chris Davis

For a stretch, Davis was one of the most feared sluggers in baseball—because every swing looked like he was trying to win the Home Run Derby. He didn’t adjust to the count, and eventually, it caught up to him, but wow, what a ride.
Read More: 20 MLB Stars Who Acted Like Icons Before Earning It
3. Sammy Sosa

Sosa’s corked-bat drama aside, he had one of the most explosive swings the league ever saw. Every pitch was a chance for a souvenir, and he rarely held back.
Read More: MLB Swingers: Ranking the Top 7 Prettiest Swings in History
2. Aaron Judge

Judge brings the hammer every single at-bat, regardless of the count. When you’re built like a linebacker and hit like a wrecking ball, there’s no reason to ease up.
Read More: 20 MLB Hitters Who Were Allergic to Walks
1. Vladimir Guerrero

Vlad Sr. didn’t care if the pitch was in the zone, out of the zone, or bouncing in the dirt—he was swinging. Count be damned, he was always looking to go deep with that wild, beautiful approach.
Read More: The 30 Most Effortless Swings in MLB History