- The longest home run of the season was hit on the last weekend of the season, by Wladimir Balentien, at an astounding 495 feet. That would barely clear the fence at Citi Field
- Speaking of Citi field, there were 5 stadiums that allowed less homers per game, though dont tell that to David Wright who's average distance went up 3 feet, yet hit 23 fewer home runs
- The most difficult stadium to homer in this year was Busch Stadium, which is strange considering the home run leader, Albert Pujols, plays in that stadium. 414 foot average doesnt care about dimensions.
- Since 2005, David Eckstein has averaged more feet on his home runs than Dustin Pedroia. Sure, Pedroia hits more of them, but most are just over the short green monster. In fact, Pedroia OPSed 133 less points on the road. Maybe this blog needs a new writer named Dustin "MVP" Pedroia
- The new Yankee Stadium was by far the best homer park at nearly 3 per game compared to just 2 last year and 2.3 in 2007.
- Mark Reynolds hit the longest home run in 3 different stadiums and averaged a crazy 420 feet on the season. And he struck out line 220 times
- 2nd straight year no one in the AL hit 40 homers, and no one in baseball has hit 50 since 2007. Bring back the roids!
- Braden Looper gave up 39 homers, but who cares about the pitchers. Wake me up when Eric Milton comes back from surgery and give up back to back 40 homer seasons the way he did in '04 and '05
Home run results from 2009
Posted by
The 'Bright' One
on Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Labels:
hit tracker,
Home runs
Hittrackeronline.com is the resource most baseball analysts use when they need to know anything related to home runs. Distance, speed, trajectory, wind...it's all provided for you for every home run hit during the entire season. So let's look at some of the fun facts from the season
2 comments:
Also, im not changing my name!
Can we learn anything like sustainability from HTTO? Like are the guys like Cruz and Reynolds and Cuddyer more likely to sustain their HR rate because they hit a shit ton of "no doubt" HR and guys like Ibanez and Ortiz less likely to sustain their HR totals?
I mean, obviously there is, but like is there some article or stat or equation that helps prove sustainability by how many lucky v just enough v no doubt a gut hits?
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