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Seattle's Cal Raleigh to face Tampa Bay's Junior Caminero for Home Run Derby title

Seattle's Cal Raleigh to face Tampa Bay's Junior Caminero for Home Run Derby title

ATLANTA (AP) — Seattle's Cal Raleigh and Tampa Bay's Junior Caminero advanced to the final round of the All-Star Home Run Derby on Monday night.
Pittsburgh's Oneil Cruz hit the longest homer, a 513-foot drive over Truist Park's right-center field seats in the first round but was eliminated by Raleigh 19-13 in the semifinals after Caminero beat Minnesota's Byron Buxton 8-7.
Atlanta's Matt Olson, Washington's James Wood, the New York Yankees' Jazz Chisholm Jr. and the Athletics' Brent Rooker were eliminated in the first round of the annual power show.
Cruz and Caminero each hit 21 long balls and Buxton had 20 in the opening round. Raleigh and Rooker had 17 apiece, but Raleigh advanced on the tiebreaker of their longest homer, 470.61 feet to 470.53.
Cruz's long drive was the hardest-hit at 118 mph.
The longest derby homer since Statcast started tracking in 2016 was 520 feet by Juan Soto in the mile-high air of Denver's Coors Field in 2021. Last year, the longest drive at Arlington, Texas, was 473 feet by Atlanta's Marcell Ozuna.
Raleigh, who leads the major leagues with 38 homers, was pitched to by his father, Todd, former coach of Tennessee and Western Carolina. His younger brother Todd Raleigh Jr. did the catching.
Just the second Derby switch-hitter after Baltimore's Adley Rutschman in 2023, Raleigh hit his first eight left-handed, took a timeout, then hit seven right-handed. Going back to lefty, he then hit two more in the bonus round and stayed lefty for the semifinals.
Wood hit 16 homers, including a 486-foot shot and one that landed on the roof of the Chop House behind the right-field wall. Olson, disappointing his hometown fans, finished with 15 and was eliminated in the first round for the second time.
Chisholm hit just three homers.
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Cal Raleigh's 'pinch-me moment': Home Run Derby win a family affair for Big Dumper
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time30 minutes ago

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Cal Raleigh's 'pinch-me moment': Home Run Derby win a family affair for Big Dumper

ATLANTA — Cal Raleigh long ago departed the world he knew and stepped into the surreal. Yet reaching the zenith of his professional career has a strange way of bringing it all home. Raleigh punched his ticket to Major League Baseball's All-Star Game and Home Run Derby on the strength of 38 home runs, the most by an American League player before the Midsummer Classic. He will find himself the topic of conversation in the clubhouse, the dugout, shagging balls in batting practice, his well-decorated teammates suddenly wanting to know the forces behind the man they call Big Dumper. Yet when he stepped to the plate for his first swing at the Home Run Derby, his past, present and future coalesced. Pitching was his father Todd, the former Western Carolina and Tennessee coach, the man who dragged young Cal along to practices and batboy opportunities and built a workout facility at their North Carolina home. And catching was Todd 'T' Raleigh, Raleigh's 15-year-old brother whose games he tries to attend when his Seattle Mariners travels take him to back to the Deep South, who dons the hand-me-down cleats big brother bequeaths. The family connection clicked better than anyone could imagine: Raleigh became the first catcher in Home Run Derby history to win the event, outlasting Tampa Bay's Junior Caminero in the finals to become the first Seattle Mariner since Ken Griffey Jr. to win the event. It is yet another huge figure that Raleigh now stands shoulder to shoulder with. And this latest chapter unfolded in a familiar place, surrounded by so many familiar faces. When Raleigh first played with the Mariners at Atlanta's Truist Park, Jackson County, North Carolina chartered two buses to see him play. Now, much of the family has relocated even closer, with T attending school south of Atlanta. 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He escaped the first round on a tiebreaker, his 17 home runs equaling Brent Rooker but advancing on the longest home run, which was a mere 0.08 feet farther than Rooker's. "I guess I got lucky there. One extra biscuit, " Raleigh quipped. It was Todd Raleigh who convinced his sons to switch-hit, even if it would tax his arm further throwing to both sides. Monday night, it was Todd who grooved pitches just right to ensure Cal's picturesque swing would send balls flying into the Truist Park stands, onto the Chop House restaurant roof, and into Derby history. Seated on a dais with his two sons, Cal clad in the champion's chain and the trophy nearby, Todd couldn't believe his good fortune. "It's a dream come true," he says. "Anybody that's ever played baseball as a kid dreams of stuff like this. I dreamed of it, he dreamed of it. When you're a parent, you look at it a little differently, right? Because you want your kids to be happy. "To do it as a family was really special. I don't know why we've been blessed like this." Yet more could be around the corner. Unbelievable feats As the second half unfolds, Raleigh will be commanding so many narratives. Can he break Salvador Perez's single-season record of 48 home runs by a primary catcher? Become the first backstop to top the 50-homer mark? Hold off Ohtani (32 homers) and Judge (35) and win the 2025 home run crowd? Break Judge's AL record of 62 home runs? Raleigh's on pace for – gulp – 64 homers. Surreal indeed, even for those with a front row seat. 'Everybody knew how good he was defensively, especially winning a Platinum Glove. This year, he's just taking it to a whole other level,' says Mariners All-Star right-hander Bryan Woo. 'I feel like everybody on the team is enjoying it just as much as fans are. 'We're just scratching our heads in the dugout and saying, 'This is unbelievable.'' It is a shock and also something less than that, given the track Raleigh's been on for most of his 28 years. 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You want to give back to players. I'm the same way; I still ask questions. 'I'm curious.' And so is the baseball world, wondering where this surreal journey will finish this year.

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