Los Angeles Times

Bellinger keeps up in wild homer race

Dodgers’ slugger, Trout, Brewers’ Yelich and Mets’ Alonso could all hit 50.

- By Jack Harris

Michael Wacha craned his neck, his gaze going from the plate to the sky. In right field, Jose Martinez barely moved. In the broadcast booth, Joe Davis could only repeat himself.

“Oh my gosh,” Davis said, watching the baseball hook around the foul pole into the second deck in right field at Dodger Stadium. “Oh my goodness.”

Cody Bellinger’s first-inning three-run home run Monday, his 37th of the season, was that mesmerizin­g.

“A monster shot,” Davis continued on the broadcast. “He’s tied with Yelich.”

Except that last part wasn’t true. In what is shaping up to be a historic home run battle, the leaderboar­d changes fast. Though Bellinger entered the night with the second-most home runs in the majors, trailing Milwaukee slugger Christian Yelich by one, the tables had already turned by Bellinger’s first at-bat.

At the start of play Monday, baseball’s home run leaders were: Yelich (37), Bellinger (36), the Angels’ Mike Trout (36) and the New York Mets’ Pete Alonso (34). Then Yelich launched a solo shot (his 38th) in Pittsburgh at 4:13 p.m. Pacific time. At 5:57, Trout went deep (his 37th) in Cincinnati. At 7:15, Yelich hit another homer (39th) that splashed into the Allegheny River. Seven minutes after that, Alonso left the park (his 35th) in New York.

Bellinger’s moonshot didn’t occur until 7:26. According to STATS, it was only the fourth time in MLB history that the league’s top four home run hitters all hit at least their 35th home run on the same day.

“Pretty crazy day,” Bellinger said when told of the stat.

The chase for the home run crown might turn even more bizarre. Excluding the steroid era (1993-2002), there have never been more than two 50-home run hitters in the same season. This year, Yelich, Bellinger, Trout and Alonso are all on pace to get there — and they seem to be unknowingl­y one-upping one another every night.

Trout and Alonso also homered Tuesday.

Bellinger says he isn’t purposely tracking the other home run contenders. Really, he doesn’t need to. As the numbers mount, the hunt becomes almost inescapabl­e. Once he got to the clubhouse after the game Monday, he was immediatel­y made aware of what had happened.

“I was not aware until after,” he said. “When I was told.”

Bellinger had been in a mini-slump during the second half of July. Over his final 12 games of the month, he went just nine for 40 with three doubles, three RBIs and zero home runs. In the five games since the start of August, he already has three homers.

“The one consistent is that he’s been in the strike zone for the entire season,” manager Dave Roberts said. “He’s taken his walks. His on-base [percentage] has always been good. But when he barrels it and elevates it, it’s going to leave the ballpark.”

Which is what he did to a 95-mph fastball Wacha left down the middle Monday to keep pace in the blistering home run chase.

“You don’t really feel it [off the bat],” Bellinger said. “You just kind of watch it.”

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? CODY BELLINGER HAD been in a mini-slump before finding his power stroke again in August.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press CODY BELLINGER HAD been in a mini-slump before finding his power stroke again in August.

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