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Some nights in baseball feel routine. A few runs here, a big hit there, maybe one standout performance that carries the headlines. April 13 was not one of those nights.
From the first pitch to the final out, it felt like something was off in the best way possible. Scoreboards kept lighting up. Balls kept flying out. And across the league, in game after game, hitters weren’t just producing… they were taking over.
By the time the dust settled, nine different players had recorded multi-homer games in a single night, a rare, almost surreal power surge that turned an ordinary day on the schedule into one of the most memorable offensive explosions we’ve seen in years.
Mike Trout
Trout put on a show in the Bronx. He crushed two homers and drove in five runs, including a go-ahead blast in the 8th that looked like the knockout punch. For most players, that’s a game-winner. For Trout, it somehow still wasn’t enough in one of the wildest games of the season.
Aaron Judge
Judge matched Trout swing for swing in a full-on superstar duel. He launched two homers, including a 456-foot missile, and finished with three RBIs, continuing his climb up the Yankees’ all-time multi-HR list.
Trent Grisham
Grisham joined Aaron Judge for the Yankees. He blasted two homers, including a clutch game-tying shot in the 9th to keep the Yankees alive.
Josh Naylor
Naylor brought the energy early and never let up, barreling multiple balls and delivering two clutch homers that powered Seattle’s offense. It was a classic Naylor night: loud contact, emotion, and big-time run production.
Ketel Marte
Marte did damage from both sides of the plate, staying locked in all night and cashing in twice with authority. Smooth, controlled swings and perfect timing.
Kyle Schwarber
Schwarber went full Schwarbomb mode. Two swings, two no-doubt homers, both crushed with that signature uppercut power. When he gets hot, it comes in waves, and pitchers feel every bit of it.
Nolan Arenado
Arenado turned back the clock with a vintage performance. Two homers, both driven with his trademark balance and bat control. Power to all fields and complete command at the plate.
Jeremiah Jackson
Jackson delivered one of the more surprising performances of the night, stepping up and launching two homers in a breakout showing. It was his first career multi-homer performance.
Jake Burger
Burger lived up to the name. Two absolute tanks, both hit with raw power and zero doubt. When he squares it up, it doesn’t stay in the park, and he proved it twice.