Longest walk-off home runs in Statcast history
With the power-hitting prowess of today's ballplayers, towering, 450-foot home runs have almost become a regular occurrence -- though no less impressive. But what about hitting a monster home run with the game on the line or down to your last few strikes, sending everyone home with some extra flair? What about 450-foot (or more) walk-off home runs?
In fact, unusual as they are, new all-time records have been set in back-to-back seasons, with Byron Buxton raising the bar in 2022 and Nolan Jones reaching new heights in 2023. Here are the longest walk-off home runs in the Statcast era (since 2015).
1) Nolan Jones, Rockies: 472 feet
June 11, 2023 vs. Padres
Don't let the modest final score fool you -- this was a wild one. After Blake Snell dominated the Rockies for seven innings of one-run ball, the Padres turned a 3-1 lead over to their bullpen. Almost immediately, Rockies second baseman Coco Montes, making his Major League debut, hit a game-tying two-run homer in the bottom of the eighth. In the top of the ninth, the Padres once again took the lead courtesy of a wild pitch, and in the bottom of the ninth, Ryan McMahon led off with a game-tying solo shot -- at which point worsening weather forced a one-hour, 25-minute delay. The awkward pause didn't seem to bother Jones, who, facing Brent Honeywell with two outs in the inning, launched a 111.6-mph, 472-ft moonshot to seal the win and set a new Statcast record.
2) Byron Buxton, Twins: 469 feet
April 24, 2022 vs. White Sox
As a true five-tool player, when Buxton is on the field, he tends to leave his mark on the Statcast leaderboards. This game was a great example. With his club trailing the White Sox late, Buxton hit a game-tying home run in the 7th inning that would ultimately force extras, once again bringing the Twins' center fielder to the plate in a big spot in the bottom of the 10th. With two men on and one out, and now trailing again after Chicago scored in the top half of the inning, Buxton hit a monster 110.8 mph, 469-foot home run off of White Sox closer Liam Hendriks for what was, at the time, the longest walk-off home run in Statcast history -- and the longest shot of his career to date.
3) Mark Reynolds, Rockies: 464 feet
June 26, 2016 vs. Diamondbacks
The majority of the power-hitting Reynolds' career took place before the advent of Statcast, but he did have just enough time to put himself atop this list until he was bumped to No. 2 by Buxton. The Rockies and D-backs were locked in a 7-7 tie in the ninth when Reynolds came to the plate to face his former team and sent Silvino Bracho's offering 464 feet into dead center. Despite leading this list, the 464-footer only stood as Reynolds' career best tracked by Statcast for less than a month before he topped it by 20 feet.
4) Kyle Schwarber, Nationals: 463 feet
April 16, 2021 vs. Diamondbacks
Schwarber's bomb was unusual for a number of reasons. The Nationals and Diamondbacks each entered the bottom of the ninth scoreless with only seven hits between them. Avoiding the need for a rally, Schwarber took Arizona's Alex Young deep into the second deck at Nationals Park and gave the Nats a neat 1-0 win. Even better? That was his first home run in a Nationals uniform.
5) Salvador Perez, Royals: 459 feet
April 17, 2021, vs. Blue Jays
A walk-off home run in the bottom of the seventh? The Blue Jays and Royals played a doubleheader, so with the game locked at 2-2, Kansas City was on walk-off watch a little earlier than usual in Game 2. Perez didn't just win the game with this 459-foot blast -- he also set a new personal record for home run distance, topping his previous high of 454 feet.
6) Chris Davis, Orioles: 458 feet
Sept. 2, 2015 vs. Rays
Davis hit 47 home runs in 2015, his second-highest single-season mark, so it should come as no surprise that he actually hit two walk-off homers that year. Coincidentally, both walk-offs were part of multi-homer games. Davis' walk-off bomb vs. Matt Andriese was the longest tracked home run of his career.
7-T) Nelson Cruz, 457 feet
June 10, 2021 vs. Yankees
Even before Cruz stepped to the plate in the bottom of the ninth at Target Field, the Twins had already rallied for two runs to tie the Yankees on a two-run blast by Josh Donaldson off Aroldis Chapman. Then it was Cruz's turn, and he didn't disappoint. With pinch-hitter Willians Astudillo on first base, the 40-year-old slugger drove a 98 mph fastball from Chapman into the bushes beyond the center-field fence to deliver the win for Minnesota.
7-T) Randal Grichuk, 457 feet
Sept. 6, 2022 vs. Brewers
Like Cruz's walk-off blast, Grichuk's three-run bomb at Coors Field capped a furious late comeback. The Rockies trailed 6-1 headed into the bottom of the eighth but rallied for five runs to force extra innings. Grichuk hit a 411-foot tying homer in the frame, then delivered again in the 10th with runners on the corners. He launched a pitch from Taylor Rogers onto the concourse beyond the left-field stands to walk it off.
9) Kyle Schwarber, 454 feet
April 30, 2021 vs. Marlins
Just two weeks after launching a 463-foot walk-off shot to lift the Nationals over the D-backs, Schwarber delivered a walk-off homer again in a 2-1 Washington victory over Miami. He belted the two-run shot off reliever Yimi García in the bottom of the 10th inning after the Marlins had taken the lead in the top of the frame. Schwarber crushed García's 95.8 mph fastball to right-center field, registering an exit velocity off the bat of 115.4 mph.
10-T) Anthony Rizzo, Cubs: 453 feet
July 26, 2018 vs. Diamondbacks
By July of 2018, it had been almost four years since Rizzo's last walk-off home run. That probably had nothing to do with this ball almost leaving Wrigley entirely, but it certainly wasn't a bad way to end the streak. This 453-footer that broke a 6-6 tie and gave the Cubs the win was his longest home run of 2018, and stands as the third-longest of his career tracked by Statcast.
10-T) Giancarlo Stanton, Yankees: 453 feet
June 20, 2018 vs. Mariners
No list of mammoth home runs would be complete without Stanton, who owns the second-farthest home run since 2015 (504 feet) and nine of the top 11 hardest-hit balls. So it is entirely unsurprising that his first walk-off in New York qualified for this list. With the game tied at five in the bottom of the ninth, Stanton sent an 0-2 slider from Ryan Cook 453 feet into left-center. Somehow, its exit velocity of 117.9 mph barely cracks his personal top 30 tracked by Statcast.