For half a century, the number stood untouched.
Generations of Padres fans grew up knowing it. Players passed through San Diego, stars came and went, and still the franchise home run record remained anchored in another era.
Until Friday night, when Manny Machado stepped into the box and changed the tone of the building.
Twice.

Machado homered two times in the Padresâ 5â1 win over the San Francisco Giants, tying Nate Colbertâs long-standing franchise record of 163 career home runs.
The first came earlyâa solo shot that felt routine by Machado standards. The second came with intent.
Leading off the eighth inning, Machado drove the ball into the second deck in left field, a no-doubt swing that erased 50 years of separation in one violent arc.
The crowd of 42,595 didnât just cheer. It pausedâthen erupted.
âItâs a special accomplishment,â Machado said afterward. âTo do it at home, in front of these fans, makes it that much more special.â

That detail mattered.
Records can fall anywhere. But some moments are meant for specific settings. The bubble gum. The slow turn around second base. The awareness that everyone in the stadium understood what theyâd just seen.
Manager Mike Shildt didnât overcomplicate it. He called it a âbig boy home run.â And the phrase stuck, because it captured more than distanceâit captured authority.

Machado tied Colbertâs mark with 20 games still remaining in his sixth season with the Padres. Colbert needed six full seasons from 1969 to 1974 to reach the same total.
Machado reached it in a different era, under different pressure, carrying expectations that didnât exist when the franchise was young.
This wasnât a chase built on nostalgia. It was built on consistency.

Machadoâs second homer of the night was his 25th of the season and added to a career that now spans 338 home runs across 13 years. Forty-two multi-homer games since his 2012 debut.
Production in Baltimore. A brief, high-stakes stint in Los Angeles. And then San Diegoâwhere his career found permanence.
Teammates werenât surprised.
âI mean, heâs Manny Machado,â said winning pitcher Michael King. âAll of itâs very much expected. He changes games.â

Thatâs the part that doesnât always show up in box scores.
When Machado is going, the Padres feel different. Giants manager Bob Melvinâwho managed Machado in San Diego the last two seasonsâput it bluntly: âWhen heâs going good, this team is going good.
This is his team.â
Friday night played out like proof.
Machadoâs first homer capped a chaotic opening inning that gave the Padres a quick lead.

His RBI single in the fifth extended it. And his second homer erased the remaining distance between legacy and ownership.
Nate Colbertâs record wasnât diminished. It was joined.
But the context has shifted.
Machado didnât just tie a numberâhe tied himself to the franchiseâs spine. In a city that has waited decades for permanence, this felt like something closer to inheritance.
There are still games left. The record will almost certainly fall outright. But even before it does, the conversation has changed.
The Padresâ history no longer belongs to the past alone.
Itâs standing at third base, chewing gum, and reminding everyoneâquietly, emphaticallyâwhose moment this is.
And with October approaching, the question now isnât whether Manny Machado will stand alone at the top.
Itâs what happens to this team when he does.
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