Why White Sox Fans Suddenly Have A Real Home Run Derby Reason

Fans can expect exciting changes and a fresh lineup as the iconic Home Run Derby returns to Philadelphia, promising an electrifying evening of baseball spectacle.

The 2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby arrives with a different feel across the board: a new eight-man field, a new format, and a new home on Netflix.

The action is set for tonight at 8 p.m. ET from Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, where the Derby will be streamed live for the first time on Netflix.

This year’s group of sluggers features Junior Caminero of the Rays, Jac Caglianone of the Royals, Ben Rice of the Yankees, Willson Contreras of the Red Sox, Jordan Walker of the Cardinals, Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber of the Phillies, and Munetaka Murakami of the White Sox.

The format has also been overhauled. The timed rounds that have been part of the event since 2015 are gone.

Instead, each hitter gets a set number of swings: 20 in the opening round, then 15 in the semifinals and 15 again in the final round. Every swing counts, whether it leaves the yard or not.

There is one wrinkle, though: if a player homers on his final swing of a round, he can keep going until he misses one.

After the first round, the four players with the most homers move on. They’ll be seeded by their first-round totals and paired off head-to-head - No. 1 against No. 4 and No. 2 against No. 3 - to decide the two finalists.

If the first round ends in a tie, distance breaks it, with the longest homer from the tied players sending one hitter through. In the semifinals and finals, ties go to three-swing swing-offs until somebody wins.

Philadelphia has hosted the Derby once before, back in 1996 at Veterans Stadium. That event featured 10 competitors for the first time and came down to Barry Bonds and Mark McGwire, two of the game’s biggest power bats. Bonds led the semis with 10 homers, McGwire had nine, and in the final round Bonds erased a two-homer deficit with one out left by going deep on three straight swings to claim his only Derby crown.

Last year’s event produced its own memorable finish. Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh, who had predicted at age 8 that he would one day win the Derby, did exactly that 20 years later by beating Caminero 18-15 in the final at Truist Park in Atlanta. Raleigh’s run was nearly over in the opening round, but he survived on a longest-homer tiebreaker by less than an inch.

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White Sox Just Took Another Intriguing Bat Fans Will Worry About

The White Sox added another intriguing bat to the pipeline in Vanderbilt junior Braden Holcomb, a late-round pick with enough athleticism to keep scouts interested and enough versatility to make him a little hard to pin down. Selected at No. 345, Holcomb brings speed and experience around the diamond, the kind of profile teams often bet on when they think there is something to unlock with the right development path.

The catch, as always with a player like this, is that the bat has to come along first. Holcombs contact issues helped push him down the board, and Chicago will have to sort through both his swing and his long-term defensive home if it wants the pick to pay off. A possible start in Kannapolis would give the organization time to do exactly that, but it also underlines how much projection still sits in this one. [Read more 🡒]

White Sox Fans Just Got A Surprising Home Run Derby Twist

The Home Run Derby is getting a fresh look in 2026, and White Sox fans will notice it right away. The event is moving to Netflix exclusively, and the familiar timed rounds are out in favor of a swings-based format that should change the rhythm of the whole night. Eight players will be in the field, with the first round played without a bracket before the top four move on to a seeded semifinal and final.

For Chicago, the bigger intrigue is how this new setup will play for the clubs own entrant, especially with the Derby landing in a year when the field includes names like Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber and a $1 million prize is on the line. The format adds a different kind of pressure from the start, since every swing matters more than ever, and the White Sox will be watching closely to see whether the new structure helps or hurts their chances once the competition begins. [Read more 🡒]