The San Francisco Giants and San Diego Padres went south of the border this weekend to play in MLB’s Mexico City Series. Most of us figured there’d be plenty of runs scored during this two-game set. And while Sunday’s finale was more on the normal side, my goodness the opener on Saturday was bananas.
Across these two head-to-head matchups, San Francisco and San Diego combined to hit 15 (!!) home runs. Of this total, 11 came in the first game at Estadio Alfredo Harp Helu. This isn’t overly surprising. The park, which opened in 2019, sits 7,349 feet above sea level. The highest elevation of any MLB stadium is Coors Field… which is “just” 5,200 feet above sea level.
The Padres won both of these games against their NL West foe. Game 1 finished with a 16-11 score that felt more like a low-scoring football game. San Diego came right back and won 6-4 on Sunday. If we split the homer production down by team, San Francisco actually out-homered the Padres, 8-7. That’s not how baseball works, though.
So, yea — lots of homers were hit. But it’s not just that. It’s how far they traveled and in what order they happened. In just that series opener on Saturday, both squads combined to slug seven homers of 440-plus feet (a Statcast-era record). Four of those dingers traveled at least 450 feet (another Statcast-era record). The Padres and Giants also hit back-to-back homers on two different occasions…each. And as you can imagine, that’s an MLB record.
Given the history that was made and the frequency of moonshots that were hit, we had to collect all of the tanks and put them in one spot. Included below are the distance and exit velocity numbers from MLB game recaps (Game 1, Game 2), as well as what each bomb brought that player’s season-long total to. Enjoy.
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Distance: 482 feet
Exit Velocity: 105.7 mph
Distance: 474 feet
Exit Velocity: 103.4 mph
Distance: 442 feet
Exit Velocity: 105.8 mph
Distance: 456 feet
Exit Velocity: 104.5 mph
Distance: 448 feet
Exit Velocity: 113.3 mph
Distance: 455 feet
Exit Velocity: 106.1 mph
Distance: 375 feet
Exit Velocity: 95.4 mph
Distance: 442 feet
Exit Velocity: 100.9 mph
Distance: 436 feet
Exit Velocity: 106.8 mph
Distance: 434 feet
Exit Velocity: 100.2 mph
Distance: 413 feet
Exit Velocity: 97.6 mph
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Distance: 394 feet
Exit Velocity: 108.4 mph
Distance: 382 feet
Exit Velocity: 95.8 mph
Distance: 460 feet
Exit Velocity: 106 mph
Distance: 440 feet
Exit Velocity: 104.6 mph
The next time MLB sends two teams to Mexico City for a series, make sure you’re ready for more moonshots. We sure will be.
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