Jac Caglianone is taking his power show to Philadelphia.
The Royals slugger said Wednesday he will compete in Monday’s T-Mobile Home Run Derby, which will air live on Netflix. It will be Caglianone’s first Derby appearance, and it gives Kansas City its first participant since Bobby Witt Jr. launched 50 homers to finish second in the 2024 event in Texas. Witt, now the American League’s starting shortstop for the All-Star Game, will be in Philly with right-hander Michael Wacha to back Caglianone.
The current Derby field also includes Rays third baseman Junior Caminero and Yankees first baseman Ben Rice. Caglianone and Caminero are both 23, putting them in position to challenge the record for youngest Derby winner. That mark belongs to Juan Gonzalez, who was 23 years and 265 days old when he won in 1993.
Even without an All-Star nod this past weekend, Caglianone fits the Derby stage perfectly. His batting practice sessions make the point fast: the ball jumps off his bat, and it keeps doing it to every part of the park.
That kind of raw pop is exactly why the Royals made him the No. 6 overall pick in the 2024 Draft. Kansas City took the two-way Florida standout and quickly made it clear it wanted him developed as a hitter.
That path got him to the majors fast. After tearing through Double-A and Triple-A last season, Caglianone debuted on June 3, 2025, less than a year after being drafted.
His first taste of the big leagues came with some bumps, but the rookie has started to settle in during 2026 and has grown into an everyday bat in the middle of the Royals’ lineup. Entering Wednesday’s action, he was hitting .258/.322/.455 with 14 home runs. June was his breakout month: nine homers, 21 runs scored, and a place near the top of the American League leaderboard in several categories, including OPS at 1.036, total bases at 66 and batting average at .309.
What’s made the leap more real is that Caglianone isn’t just swinging for the fences. He’s shown a better feel for taking what pitchers give him, even if that means singles, doubles or walks.
But when a mistake shows up in the zone, he’s built to punish it. The ball comes off his bat with elite force, and his 77.2 mph average bat speed entering Wednesday was tied with two other players for sixth in the Majors.
The home runs themselves tell the rest of the story. Entering Wednesday, Caglianone’s average homer traveled 418 feet, tied with Mickey Moniak for the longest in MLB among players with at least 10 homers. His average home run exit velocity of 108.6 mph ranked third in that same group, behind Shohei Ohtani and James Wood.
And most of those blasts aren’t scraping over the wall. Nearly 79% of Caglianone’s homers this season have been no-doubters, the third-highest rate among hitters with 10 or more home runs, trailing only Alec Burleson and Iván Herrera.
His longest homer this season was a 444-foot shot on June 21, which ranks second only to rookie Carter Jensen’s 449-foot blast last week for the longest by a Royal in 2026. The longest homer of Caglianone’s career came on July 9 last year, when he sent one 466 feet. Since the start of 2025, only 20 players have hit a home run that far.
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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 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 🡒]
