CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Breaking down Jim Thome's 600 career home runs (and his postseason ones, too), with thanks to baseball-reference.com.

For teams

Indians 334; White Sox 134; Phillies 96; Twins 36.

Home: 335 Away: 265

Against teams (30)

1. Tigers 65; 2. Twins 57; 3. Royals 48; 13. Indians 20.

Parks (38)

1. Jacobs/Progressive Field 186; 2. US Cellular 98 (White Sox); 18. (tie) Cleveland Stadium 6.

Pitchers (393)

1. Rick Reed 9; 2. Roger Clemens 8; 3. Justin Verlander 7; 4. (tie) Eric Milton, Bobby Witt, Mike Mussina 6.

Field location

Right 204; center 113; left 105; left-center 91; right-center 87.

Men on base

None – 329; one – 182; two – 80; three – 9.

Position in batting order

Fourth – 202; third – 153; fifth – 141; sixth – 53; seventh – 33; eighth – 15; ninth – 3.

Position in field

1B – 310; DH – 194; 3B – 93; PH – 4 (one home run counts as both a DH and PH).

Vs. RHP 486; vs. LHP 114.

By pitch count

First pitch, 90; 3-2, 82; 1-1, 69; 1-0, 65; 2-1, 48; 2-2, 46; 0-1, 45; 2-0, 39; 1-2, 38; 3-1, 37; 3-0, 17; 0-2, 14.

In wins 403; in losses 195.

Two-home run games: 46

Three-home run games: 2

Walk-off home runs: 12 (tied for all-time lead with Babe Ruth, Jimmie Foxx, Stan Musial, Mickey Mantle, Frank Robinson).

Milestone home runs

(Career home run number: date, where, pitcher, opponent; score)

With the Indians:

No. 1: Oct. 4, 1991, New York, Steve Farr, Yankees. After trailing, 2-1, a two-out, two-run home run in the top of the ninth inning; Indians win, 3-2.

No. 2: June 29, 1992, Cleveland, Jack McDowell, White Sox. His first home run in Cleveland; Indians lose, 9-6.

No. 18: June 15, 1994, Cleveland, Scott Brow, Blue Jays. His first walk-off home run, in the bottom of the 13th inning; Indians win, 4-3.

No. 50: July 26, 1995, California, Mike Harkey, Angels; Indians lose, 6-3.

No. 100: May 14, 1997, Texas, Bobby Witt, Rangers; Indians lose, 4-3.

No. 150: June 9, 1998, Cleveland, Jon Lieber, Pirates; Indians lose, 7-4.

No. 175: July 3, 1999, Cleveland, Don Wengert, Royals. Hits a 511-foot blast to center field, which remains the longest home run in Jacobs/Progressive Field history; Indians win, 9-5.

No. 200: April 15, 2000, Cleveland, Mark Clark, Rangers; Indians lose, 6-4.

No. 243: May 29, 2001, Detroit, Victor Santos, Tigers. Becomes the Indians' all-time home run leader, passing Albert Belle; Indians win, 6-4.

No. 250: June 12, 2001, Cleveland, Jimmy Haynes, Brewers; Indians lose, 4-2.

No. 300: June 5, 2002, Minnesota, Eric Milton, Twins; Indians win, 6-4.

No. 332: Sept. 25, 2002, Minnesota, Rick Reed, Twins. His 50th home run, tying Albert Belle's single-season team record; Indians lose, 7-5.

No. 333: Sept. 27, 2002, Cleveland, Wes Obermueller, Royals. His 51st home run breaks Indians' single-season record; Indians win, 8-3.

No. 334: Sept. 28, 2002, Cleveland, Jeremy Affeldt, Royals. His 52nd home run of the season and last of his Indians career. He remains Indians' all-time leader in career and single-season home runs; Indians win, 6-5.

With the Phillies:

No. 350: June 21, 2003, Philadelphia, Mike Timlin, Red Sox; Phillies win, 6-5.

No. 400: June 14, 2004, Philadelphia. Joe Acevedo, Reds; Phillies win, 10-7.

With the White Sox:

No. 449: May 29, 2006, Cleveland, Cliff Lee, Indians. His first home run in Cleveland as an opponent; White Sox win, 11-0.

No. 450: May 29, 2006, Cleveland, Guillermo Mota, Indians; White Sox win, 11-0.

No. 500: Sept. 16, 2007, Chicago, Dustin Moseley, Angels. Becomes the 23rd player with 500 home runs on the ninth-inning, walk-off homer; White Sox win, 9-7.

No. 541: Sept. 30, 2008, Chicago, Nick Blackburn, Twins. His seventh-inning home run is the game-winner in the AL Central Division first-place tiebreaker game; White Sox win, 1-0.

No. 550: June 1, 2009, Chicago, Santiago Casilla, Athletics; White Sox win, 6-2.

With the Twins:

No. 581: Aug. 17, 2010, Minnesota, Matt Thornton, White Sox. Trailing, 6-5, a two-run home run in the bottom of the 10th inning -- his 12th career walk-off homer, tying five Hall of Famers for the all-time record; Twins win, 7-6.

No. 587: Sept. 11, 2010, Cleveland, Justin Germano, Indians. Becomes eighth -- the position he still holds -- on the all-time career home run list, passing Frank Robinson, with a 12th-inning homer. Twins win, 1-0.

Nos. 599 and 600: Aug. 15, 2011, Rick Porcello, Daniel Schlereth, Tigers. Went opposite field twice to become eighth hitter with at least 600 home runs.

Jim Thome has 17 postseason home runs in his career, all with the Indians. He hit eight homers in American League Division Series games, six in AL Championship Series games and three in World Series games.

Twice, Thome hit two home runs in a postseason game.

On Oct. 9, 1998 in Cleveland, he homered twice off Andy Pettitte as the Indians defeated the Yankees, 6-1, in Game 3 of the ALCS eventually won by New York, 4-2.

On Oct. 11, 1999 in Cleveland, he homered off Brett Saberhagen and Derek Lowe, but the Indians lost to the Red Sox, 12-8, in Game 5 of the ALDS, losing the series, 3-2.

Also, on Oct. 13, 1998 in New York, Thome hit a grand slam home run off David Cone to become the first player to hit four homers in an ALCS, but the Indians lost to the Yankees, 9-5, in Game 6 of the ALCS, losing the series, 4-2.

On Oct. 7, 1999 in Cleveland, he hit a grand slam home run off John Wasdin to become the first player ever with two career grand slam home runs in postseason play, as the Indians defeated the Red Sox, 11-1, in Game 2 of the ALDS eventually won by Boston, 3-2.