Oneil Cruz homer for Pittsburgh Pirates is hardest-hit baseball
Pirates notes
The Associated Press Pittsburgh Pirates' Oneil Cruz rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the third inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers.
PITTSBURGH — Pittsburgh’s Oneil Cruz had the hardest-hit ball since Statcast started tracking in 2015, a home run off Milwaukee’s Logan Henderson on Sunday that left the bat at 122.9 mph and splashed into the Allegheny River.
Cruz’s leadoff drive to right in the third inning on a 92.2 mph fastball traveled 432 feet and cut the Pirates’ deficit to 3-1 in a 6-5 loss.
“I connected really well. It feels even better just to know that it’s the hardest hit ball in the history of Statcast,” Cruz said through an interpreter. “It doesn’t matter how hard the ball was hit. I just go out and make good contact. Sometimes, I don’t even try to make the hardest contact.”
Cruz had the previous hardest-hit ball, a 122.4 mph single on Aug. 24, 2022. Miami’s Giancarlo Stanton had the prior hardest-hit home run at 121.8 mph, a drive off Gio Gonzalez at Washington on Aug. 9, 2017.
“The reason behind my at-bats is just to put good contact on the the ball,” Cruz said. “Whatever happens, happens.”
The 6-foot-7, 240-pound outfielder has hit six of the 83 home runs that have reached the river since PNC Park opened in 2001.
“I’m really glad that got out of the stadium because if that would’ve been into the stands, that thing is flying,” Pittsburgh manager Don Kelly said. “I can’t say enough about him and how he played, how he’s been playing, especially in this series.
“Superstar-type stuff. … Guys continue to grind, continue to battle. I think Oneil is, obviously, a huge part of that in what he’s doing. It’s contagious, too.”
Skenes: No deal
Paul Skenes didn’t hear Pittsburgh Pirates general manager Ben Cherington say that trading the reigning National League Rookie of the Year to give the last-place club an influx of much-needed position player talent is “not at all part of the conversation.”
When someone relayed Cherington’s comments to him, the 22-year-old ace laughed.
“It doesn’t affect anything,” Skenes told The Associated Press late Friday night after the Pirates rallied for a 6-5, 10-inning win over Milwaukee. “Anybody can play GM.”
True, but it says something about where the Pirates are currently at — well out of playoff position before Memorial Day — that Cherington’s uncharacteristically blunt answer made headlines anyway.
Yet if Skenes, who celebrated his first anniversary in the majors two weeks ago, has learned anything during his rise to stardom over the last three years, it’s that noise is not the same as news.
“There’s no substance to just all that talk that you hear on social media and news outlets and stuff like that,” Skenes said.




