White Sox Rookie Munetaka Murakami Faces A Fascinating Derby Dilemma

Rookie sensation Munetaka Murakami must decide whether to stick with his natural opposite-field power or aim for Philadelphia's inviting right-field porch in the upcoming Home Run Derby.

The White Sox are bringing Munetaka Murakami to the All-Star stage, and the rookie Japanese slugger is getting a second spotlight with a spot in the Home Run Derby.

That’s the easy part. The harder part is figuring out how he should actually attack the event.

ESPN’s Buster Olney pointed out the real wrinkle for Murakami: his batting-practice swing often produces plenty of opposite-field home runs, but in Philadelphia he’ll have to choose whether to keep that approach or go after the inviting right-field porch at Citizens Bank Park.

“Murakami's typical batting practice tends to include a lot of opposite-field home runs, but he will have to decide whether to stay with that strategy or aim for the inviting right-field porch in Philadelphia,” Olney writes.

For a left-handed hitter like Murakami, the ballpark setup makes the decision even more interesting. The right-field fence is especially appealing, and that’s where other lefties in the field - Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper, Jac Caglianone, and Ben Rice - are likely to be aiming as well.

The right-handed group, meanwhile, should be working the other way. Junior Caminero, Jordan Walker, and Willson Contreras are expected to target left field.

Murakami could try to do a little of both. But there’s a strong case for simplifying things and living on the pull side, especially if he wants to take advantage of the shorter porch rather than leaning on the opposite-field power he shows in batting practice.

He arrives with 20 homers in just 211 at-bats, which only adds to the intrigue around how he’ll approach the derby. Murakami can stick with what he knows, or he can change the plan and go hunting for the friendliest part of the park.

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