One was watching him knock down career and franchise milestones.

Altuve hit a game-tying home run against the Boston Red Sox on Friday night. It

added to his illustrious career with the franchise, as he moved into fourth place in all-time home runs with Houston.

The long ball was No. 224 of his career, which allowed him to pass Jimmy Wynn, who hit 223 for the Astros.

Wynn is a Houston legend in his own right. The Cincinnati, Ohio, native played his first 11 seasons with the Colt .45s and,

later, the Astros, and made his first All-Star Game appearance for Houston in 1967. He later played for the Los Angeles

Dodgers, the Atlanta Braves, the New York Yankees and the Milwaukee Brewers.

With Houston he batted .255 with 223 home runs and 719 RBI. He passed away

in 2020. Houston retired his No. 24 in 2005 and he served as an analyst for Astros television broadcasts.

He shares something in common with Altuve. Wynn was considered short in

stature for his time, as he stood 5-9. Altuve is 5-6 and is the shortest player in Major League Baseball.

Only three players are ahead of Altuve on this list — Jeff Bagwell at 499 home

runs, Lance Berkman at 326 home runs and Craig Biggio at 291 home runs.

Bagwell and Biggio are both in the Baseball Hall of Fame.

The Astros legend isn’t going anywhere, either. In the offseason he signed a five-year, $125 million extension that will

keep him in Houston through the 2029 season. That gives him plenty of time to catch Biggio and, perhaps, Berkman.

With that deal, Altuve set a record, becoming the first second baseman to make $300 million for his career.

Earlier this season, the 36-year-old second baseman stole his 300th career

base, making him the third Houston player to reach the milestone. In fact, he became the fifth player in MLB history to

have at least 2,000 hits, 400 doubles, 200 home runs and 300 stolen bases with a career batting average in the .300s.

The four players that Altuve joined are Derek Jeter, Paul Molitor, Willie Mays and Roberto Alomar.