Jac Caglianone is headed to the Home Run Derby.
The Kansas City Royals right fielder announced on MLB Network’s studios that he will take part in his first Derby this season, giving the club its first entrant since 2024. That year, Bobby Witt Jr. launched 50 homers and finished second to Teoscar Hernandez.
Caglianone enters as the third official participant in the field, joining Ben Rice and Junior Caminero. He’ll be an underdog on paper, but the raw power is real.
The 23-year-old has already hit 14 home runs this season, and his 77.2 mph bat speed ranks in the 97th percentile. Five more players are expected to join the Derby, including Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber.
The event will be held at Citizens Bank Park, home of the Philadelphia Phillies, and for the first time it will stream on Netflix on July 13 at 8:00 p.m. ET.
What makes Caglianone such a fitting Derby pick is the way June changed his season. He hit nine of his 14 home runs that month, turning a strong power profile into a full-blown surge. He has 21 career home runs, but this season has been the one that put his pop on display.
Caglianone will become the sixth Royals hitter to compete in the event, following Bo Jackson in 1989, Danny Tartabull in 1991, Mike Moustakas in 2017, Salvador Perez in 2021 and Witt in 2024.
The left-handed slugger has been built for this kind of stage for a while. He posted a .875 slugging percentage in 2024 and hit 33 home runs in 2023 while playing college baseball for the Florida Gators. This season, he also owns an average exit velocity of 93.7 mph, which sits in the 96th percentile.
His overall production has climbed, too. Through his first 54 games, he had an 89 wRC+, but over his last 30 games he has posted a 148 wRC+, a sign of how much more dangerous he has become at the plate for Kansas City.
In Other News...
Jac Caglianones Home Run Derby Moment Just Got Even More Personal
Jac Caglianones rise has already given Royals fans plenty to track, and now the first basemans All-Star week will come with a little extra spotlight. The 2024 first-round pick announced he will take part in the Home Run Derby ahead of the MLB All-Star Game, a nod to the kind of power that has made him one of the most watched young hitters in the organization.
His June surge helped push him onto that stage, and the Derby will now carry a personal twist that makes the moment even bigger for him and his family. Caglianone has made clear how much this means beyond the baseball itself, and the setup adds another layer to what should already be one of the more intriguing events of All-Star week. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Fans Finally Get The Jac Caglianone Power Show They Wanted
Jac Caglianone is getting the kind of stage Royals fans have been waiting for. The rookie power bat announced he will take part in the 2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby in Philadelphia, his first time in the event, after turning his raw strength into a regular fixture in Kansas Citys lineup this season.
It also gives the Royals a familiar kind of summer spotlight, since Caglianone is the clubs first Derby participant since Bobby Witt Jr. in 2024. For a team that has spent much of the year leaning on his everyday presence and loud contact, the Derby offers a national showcase for the part of his game that has already made him one of the most watchable hitters on the roster. [Read more 🡒]
Royals Turned A Routine Comebacker Into Their Worst Nightmare
A routine comebacker in the first inning at Citi Field turned into a mess the Royals will want to forget, with Kansas City handing the Mets an opening that should have been harmless. Carson Benge put the ball in play, and what followed was the kind of defensive sequence that can unravel a game before it ever settles in, especially for a club trying to keep early innings from getting away.
The odd part is how rare it was, too. Three errors on one play is the sort of breakdown that almost never shows up on a major league scorecard, and for the Royals it left an immediate stain on a night that had barely begun. Even in a sport built on routine, this was the kind of mistake cluster that can linger long after the inning ends. [Read more 🡒]
