Drake Baldwin seems fine.
The Atlanta Braves catcher returned to the lineup Tuesday after nearly a month on the 10-day injured list with an oblique strain and immediately resumed his breakout season with a leadoff homer against the San Francisco Giants.
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It wasn’t just any homer, though. Facing Giants starter Adrian Houser, Baldwin took a 94.6 mph sinker left in the middle of the zone and deposited at the base of the batter’s eye in center field.
The homer was measured by Statcast at 112.8 mph off the bat with a projected distance of 473 feet. That makes it the longest homer hit in MLB this season.
The previous longest homer belonged to the Colorado Rockies’ Seth Halvorsen at 471 feet, hit during the power boom seen at the Athletics’ Las Vegas homestand last week. That homer was part of a franchise-record 23 runs scored by the Rockies on Sunday.
Before going down with the oblique strain, Baldwin, the 2025 NL Rookie of the Year, was performing like one of the best players in baseball. He entered Tuesday slashing .303/.389/.543 with 13 homers in only 48 games.
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Despite his time missed, he led NL catchers in All-Star votes during the first release of numbers on Monday with a healthy lead over the second-place Will Smith of the Los Angeles Dodgers. There seems to be little reason to expect his campaign to lose any steam now that he’s back.
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