Longest home runs for every MLB team
Statcast measures farthest blast since 2015 for all 30 clubs
Ever since Babe Ruth launched Major League Baseball into the Live Ball Era with his awe-inspiring home runs, wowed fans have been asking: "How far did that ball go?"
Statcast has given us a whole new tool to answer that question, thanks to the tracking technology at every MLB ballpark.
Here are the longest homers hit by each of the 30 MLB clubs since Statcast began tracking home run distances at the start of the 2015 season. Postseason homers are included here.
American League East
Blue Jays: Justin Smoak -- July 1, 2015 vs. BOS
Distance: 474 feet (Watch it)
Even with all of the sluggers that have come through Toronto in recent years, this big fly from Statcast's debut season still ranks first for distance. Interestingly, it came with the switch-hitting Smoak batting right-handed against lefty Robbie Ross, even though he hit with more power from the left side over his career. Full Blue Jays leaderboard
Orioles: Jonathan Schoop -- Aug. 26, 2015 at KC
Distance: 484 feet (Watch it)
The Orioles have had their share of big sluggers in recent years, but Schoop sits atop this list, ahead of the likes of Manny Machado, Chris Davis and Mark Trumbo. Schoop launched this blast off Johnny Cueto, and the only question was whether the ball would stay fair down the left field line at Kauffman Stadium. It's also the longest homer hit in the Royals' home ballpark. Full Orioles leaderboard
Rays: Avisaíl García -- May 14, 2019 at MIA
Distance: 485 feet (Watch it)
It took a long time for anybody to break J.P. Arencibia's mark of 464 feet, set back in 2015. García finally set a new Rays record by demolishing a pitch way over the center-field wall in Miami -- also by far the longest homer by a visiting player at Marlins Park since '15. The 112.9 mph blast isn't the only 480-footer García has hit, either. Full Rays leaderboard
Red Sox: Jackie Bradley Jr. -- Aug. 27, 2019 at COL
Distance: 478 feet (Watch it)
Before this, Hanley Ramirez held the mark for longest Red Sox homer at 469 feet in April 2017. But then Bradley Jr. stepped to the plate in Colorado and rocketed this pitch 112.1 mph over the right-field fence, going 478 feet into the night. Full Red Sox leaderboard
Yankees: Aaron Judge -- Sept. 30, 2017 vs. TOR
Distance: 496 feet (Watch it)
Judge crushed two home runs clear over the Yankee Stadium bleachers in 2017. This one was the 52nd and last of his AL Rookie of the Year-winning season, a 118.3 mph, 496-foot monster shot to left-center off then-Blue Jays pitcher Marcus Stroman. It gets the edge by a single foot over the 118.6 mph, 495-foot home run Judge crushed that June off the Orioles' Logan Verrett. Those were the two longest homers in MLB in 2017 and two of the longest in Statcast history. Full Yankees leaderboard
AL Central
Guardians: Bradley Zimmer -- Aug. 9, 2021 vs. CIN
Distance: 471 feet (Watch it)
Edwin Encarnación held the mark at 466 feet for more than four years before Zimmer surpassed him with a blast off Reds lefty Justin Wilson that disappeared over the center-field wall at Progressive Field. It was only the fourth career homer off a southpaw for the left-handed-hitting Zimmer, whose previous long was 435 feet. Full Guardians leaderboard
Royals: Brandon Moss -- July 1, 2017 vs. MIN
Distance: 474 feet (Watch it)
Moss left his mark during his lone season in Kansas City, golfing this pitch to help spur a four-run comeback for the home side against the rival Twins. Moss retired the following spring, but his power clearly remained in his bat until the end. Full Royals leaderboard
Tigers: J.D. Martinez -- July 21, 2015 vs. SEA; Jeimer Candelario -- July 15, 2019 at CLE
Distance: 467 feet (Watch them: Martinez; Candelario)
Martinez one-upped Seattle slugger Nelson Cruz, who hit a 455-foot homer in the top half of the same inning, with this impressive blast to straightaway center at cavernous Comerica Park in the first season of Statcast tracking. Candelario tied Martinez with a long home run into the bullpens in right-center field in Cleveland four years later. Full Tigers leaderboard
Twins: Miguel Sanó -- Sept. 17, 2019 vs. CWS
Distance: 496 feet (Watch it)
Sanó got absolutely all of this one. The Bomba Squad slugger made the Twins the first team ever with five 30-homer hitters with a mammoth 113.5 mph, 496-foot blast to the upper deck at Target Field. All you had to do was see the look on White Sox pitcher Ross Detwiler's face as he hung his head and put his hands on his knees to know how far this one went. Full Twins leaderboard
White Sox: Luis Robert Jr. -- Oct. 1, 2020 at OAK
Distance: 487 feet (Watch it)
We all knew by this point that Robert had incredible raw power. But this shot at the Oakland Coliseum left us awe-struck anyway. In Game 3 of the 2020 AL Wild Card Series against the A's, Robert demolished a Mike Fiers pitch in the second inning into the far reaches of the left-field bleachers, giving the White Sox a 1-0 lead in a game Chicago would ultimately lose, 6-4. Yermín Mercedes gets an honorable mention here for the club's longest regular-season homer since 2015, blasting a 485-foot shot against the Royals at Guaranteed Rate Field on April 8, 2021. Full White Sox leaderboard
AL West
Angels: Shohei Ohtani -- June 30, 2023 vs. ARI
Distance: 493 feet (Watch it)
Of course it's Shohei. Ohtani blasted a ball projected at 493 feet well up into the seats at Angel Stadium to pass fellow baseball legend and teammate Mike Trout on the Angels' longest home run list. Ohtani's long ball put him on an exclusive list of batters who have hit at least 30 home runs before the All-Star Break. Unsurprisingly, he's the only pitcher to make it on this list. Full Angels leaderboard
Astros: George Springer -- May 7, 2018 at OAK
Distance: 476 feet (Watch it)
Springer almost crushed this ball straight into one of the tunnels between sections of the left-center-field seats in Oakland -- and just in case you didn't know, those sections of the seats are way above the field. The Astros record-setting shot was also part of a historic 6-for-6 game for Springer, who became the first Astros player to collect six hits in a nine-inning game. Full Astros leaderboard
Athletics: Ryon Healy -- Sept. 15, 2016 at KC
Distance: 480 feet (Watch it)
Healy brought the lumber from the right side against the Royals' Edinson Vólquez, crushing a 111.6 mph, 480-foot home run over the fountains in left-center field at Kauffman Stadium. While Healy only played 221 games for the A's, that rocket remains a record holder to this day. Full A's leaderboard
Mariners: Jarred Kelenic -- April 12, 2023 at CHC
Distance: 482 feet (Watch it)
Kelenic homered in each of the first two games of the Mariners' early-season series in Chicago, but he saved his most majestic blast for the series finale. You don't see many baseballs visit the second level of the center-field bleachers at Wrigley Field, but that's where Kelenic's ball landed, 482 feet away from home plate. Full Mariners leaderboard
Rangers: Nomar Mazara -- June 21, 2019 vs. CWS
Distance: 505 feet (Watch it)
Mazara set the MLB Statcast record for home run distance -- not just the Rangers' -- and joined Giancarlo Stanton in the 500-foot club with this rocket to the upper reaches of the upper deck in right field in Arlington. On a team with Joey Gallo, it takes a monster home run to set the record, and Mazara provided it.
"That was a bomb, a complete bomb," teammate Elvis Andrus said. "I think it was more than 505 feet. It more like 600 feet. It was really loud." Full Rangers leaderboard
National League East
Braves: Ronald Acuña Jr. -- Sept. 25, 2020 vs. BOS
Distance: 495 feet (Watch it)
The Braves' young superstar got his team's final series of the season started with a bang as he crushed a leadoff home run off Boston's Chris Mazza that landed way up in the concourse behind the left-field stands at Truist Park. Acuña had already previously set the Braves' distance record in 2020, when he went 473 feet off Yankees ace Gerrit Cole. Full Braves leaderboard
Marlins: Giancarlo Stanton -- Aug. 6, 2016 at COL
Distance: 504 feet (Watch it)
Stanton is one of the few people capable of crushing a 500-foot home run. His 504-footer at Coors Field came a year before his 59-homer MVP season in 2017, but Stanton has shown plenty of times before and since this home run that he can clear the fence by a long, long way. Full Marlins leaderboard
Mets: Pete Alonso -- July 17, 2019 at MIN
Distance: 489 feet (Watch it)
A little over a week after winning the Home Run Derby in Cleveland, Alonso broke Michael Conforto's club record of 472 feet, set the previous season. Alonso already crushed plenty of impressive shots in his rookie year, and he added to his resume against Twins reliever Matt Magill, sending a slider 110.9 mph and 489 feet to left at Target Field. The awe-inspiring two-run shot soared about halfway up the third deck. Full Mets leaderboard
Nationals: Michael A. Taylor -- Aug. 20, 2015, at COL
Distance: 493 feet (Watch it)
Rockies starter Yohan Flande was cruising against the Nationals until Taylor gave his club a game-tying lift on this blast to left-center. Even in the friendly Coors Field environment, Taylor's 110.1 mph exit velocity meant this home run was no joke. Full Nationals leaderboard
Phillies: Kyle Schwarber -- Oct. 18, 2022, at SD
Distance: 488 feet (Watch it)
During Game 1 of the NLCS, Schwarber crushed a cutter from Yu Darvish into the second deck at Petco Park for the longest Phillies home run of the Statcast Era. It was also the farthest home run tracked at Petco Park and hardest-hit (119.7 mph) postseason home run since 2015. Full Phillies leaderboard
NL Central
Brewers: Christian Yelich -- Sept. 6, 2022 at COL
Distance: 499 feet (Watch it)
Coors Field is built for power hitters, and Yelich showed us why. The Brewers lefty slugger crushed a hanging changeup from Chad Kuhl into the third deck in Denver. It was the longest big fly of the 2022 season for all of three days, surpassed by C.J. Cron's 504-foot blast at Coors Field on Sept. 9. At 499 feet, Yelich's homer is the third-longest at Coors Field since the advent of Statcast in 2015. Full Brewers leaderboard
Cardinals: Rangel Ravelo -- Sept. 12, 2019 at COL
Distance: 487 feet (Watch it)
Ravelo logged a whopping 838 games over parts of 10 Minor League seasons before he was finally called up in June 2019, and he made the most of his opportunity by hammering a massive Coors Field blast less than three months later. Ravelo's drive went most of the way up the seats in left-center. Full Cardinals leaderboard
Cubs: Willson Contreras -- Oct. 18, 2017 vs. Dodgers (NLCS Game 4)
Distance: 491 feet (Watch it)
The Cubs' longest home run in the regular season is a 481-footer by El Mago, Javier Báez, on Aug. 23, 2018. But Contreras went even deeper than Báez in the 2017 playoffs against the Dodgers. Contreras crushed a home run high off the Wrigley Field scoreboard in left field to open the scoring in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series. That 491-footer is the longest homer hit by a Cubs player under Statcast tracking, regular season or postseason, and the longest home run hit in the MLB postseason overall since 2015. Full Cubs leaderboard
Pirates: Pedro Alvarez -- Oct. 4, 2015, vs. CIN
Distance: 479 feet (Watch it)
Pittsburgh's hulking slugger decided the right-field seats at PNC Park weren't enough on the final day of the 2015 regular season, instead clearing the bleachers completely and depositing this ball into the Allegheny River. Alvarez's uppercut swing demolished the pitch with a 115.4 mph exit velocity. Full Pirates leaderboard
Reds: Aristides Aquino -- Aug. 10, 2019 vs. CHC
Distance: 469 feet (Watch it)
The Punisher also hit the hardest home run of the 2019 MLB season (his 118.3 mph homer on Aug. 8 tied him with Pete Alonso and Gary Sánchez), but his longest home run came two days later -- and capped a huge three-home-run game for the rookie sensation. Aquino turned on a 97 mph fastball from the Cubs' Dillon Maples that was right down Broadway and crushed it off the facing of the second deck in deep, deep left-center field at Great American Ball Park. Full Reds leaderboard
NL West
D-backs: Ketel Marte -- June 2, 2019 vs. NYM
Distance: 482 feet (Watch it)
Marte's leadoff home run in an early-June series finale against the Mets at Chase Field was an absolute rocket: 111.9 mph and 482 feet to left-center. It went clear over the first level of seats and landed in the concourse above. Marte surpassed Jake Lamb's 481-foot homer on April 29, 2017 by a single foot to set the D-backs record. Full D-backs leaderboard
Dodgers: Joc Pederson -- June 2, 2015 at COL
Distance: 477 feet (Watch it)
It's no surprise that the Dodgers hit their longest homer at Coors Field: a majestic blast by Pederson way up into the center-field bleachers. Pederson then hit a second 470-footer on this same day -- he hit one 472 feet in the other half of the Dodgers' doubleheader against the Rockies. He's the only player with two 470-foot homers in the same day since Statcast started tracking. Full Dodgers leaderboard
Giants: Brandon Crawford -- April 29, 2023 vs. SD
Distance: 482 feet (Watch it)
Crawford's 482-foot blast against the Padres at Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú in Mexico City almost didn't happen. The Giants shortstop circled the bases on a drive down the right-field line, only for his homer to be ruled foul on review. On the very next pitch, Crawford went high up the bleachers in left-center field. He was one of 10 different hitters to go deep in the game, tying an AL/NL record. The Giants' previous longest home run came at Coors Field, a 480-foot drive by Alex Dickerson on Sept. 1, 2020. Full Giants leaderboard
Padres: Franchy Cordero -- April 20, 2018 at AZ
Distance: 489 feet (Watch it)
Franchy absolutely crushed this one: 116.3 mph and 489 feet. The Padres slugger hit it off the scoreboard in dead center at Chase Field. That scoreboard is way above the playing field, and Franchy's homer hit way up on the scoreboard. Cordero obliterated the Padres' previous best of 461 feet, which had been set by Wil Myers the previous September. Full Padres leaderboard
Rockies: C.J. Cron -- Sept. 9, 2022
Distance: 504 feet (Watch it)
Exactly one month after his teammate Ryan McMahon set the Rockies mark with a 495-foot blast, Cron shattered the franchise record with a 504-foot moonshot that hooked past the foul pole in left field. Not only is it the longest in Rockies history, but it's also tied for the longest home run in the Statcast era with Giancarlo Stanton's long ball on Aug. 6, 2016, which, of course, was also hit at Coors Field. Full Rockies leaderboard