HOUSTON – Ryan Jeffers contemplated Royce Lewis' magical welcome-back home run Monday, and like any good teammate, offered some advice.
"He's got to get in the weight room," Jeffers deadpanned, then laughed.
Yes, Lewis' are-you-kidding home run will be long remembered, but it was struck with only 99.4 miles per hour of velocity and traveled only 336 feet into the corner. Jeffers' 10th-inning game-winner, however?
MLB's exit-velocity measurements, which go back to 2008, have never recorded a harder-hit ball hit by a Twins player. StatCast said it blasted into the Crawford boxes in left field at 117.4 mph, the hardest-hit ball of Jeffers' career and the fifth hardest in the major leagues this season. Only Miguel Sano and Nelson Cruz have ever registered 117 mph in a Twins uniform, both while hitting singles.
"It felt really good," Jeffers said of his first-pitch swing at a Bryan Abreu slider, sending his team to a 7-5 victory over the Astros. "I wasn't sure if I hit it high enough to get it out, but I did. It felt great."
It might have endangered some of the 40,744 paying customers, Twins manager Rocco Baldelli mused.
"That was just an absolute screamer," Baldelli said. "You almost watch out for the people in the stands, because it can get dangerous out there when he hits the ball like that."
Jeffers also smacked a pair of first-pitch singles during the game, his first three-hit game of the season.