StaTuesday: Twins 40-year-old slugger Cruz still mashing at Comerica Park
Nelson Cruz had to sit out most of the Minnesota Twins’ season-opening series in Milwaukee last week.
The Brewers, of course, play in the National League, so manager Rocco Baldelli couldn’t pencil him in at designated hitter. (Cruz hasn’t taken the field since playing 26 1/3 innings in right field for Seattle in 2018.)
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Cruz pinch hit in all three games against the Brewers, going 1 for 2 with an RBI on a sacrifice fly.
Well, the Twins made the jump back into the American League on Monday, playing the first of three games against division rival Detroit. Cruz was in the starting lineup at DH, batting third between second baseman Jorge Polanco and outfielder Max Kepler.
And, boy, did he make an impact.
Cruz went 3 for 6 with one double, a solo homer, a grand slam and five RBI. It marked Cruz’s 37th multi-homer game, and his 10th career grand slam.
Of those 37 multi-home run games, 12 have occurred after he turned 38. That’s the most multi-homer games for any player aged 38+, besting San Francisco’s Barry Bonds (11) and Boston’s David Ortiz (10).
The grand slam, which he smacked off Jose Urena in the second inning, had an exit velocity of 114.6 miles per hour. It was the second grand slam hit by the Twins at Comerica Park in the last 10 years, and the first since Ehire Adrianza on June 12, 2018, according to Doug Kern. Cruz is also the first Minnesota batter with a pair of homers including a grand slam at Comerica Park since Danny Valencia on Sept. 25, 2010.
THIS ONE’S FAIR.
BOOMSTICK GRAND SALAMI! 💥 pic.twitter.com/ppcylRPf4O
— Bally Sports North (@BallySportsNOR) April 5, 2021
But, of course, Cruz wasn’t finished. He led off the fifth inning with a solo shot to left field, a home run measured at 418 feet with an exit velocity of 116.6 miles per hour.
That’s the highest exit velocity tracked on a home run by Statcast (since 2015) in Twins history. It bumps down Kennys Vargas’ moonshot of 116.0 mph, which was blasted on June 10, 2017. Miguel Sano (115.8 mph; Aug. 22, 2020) and a pair of C.J. Cron dingers (115.6 mph; 115.1 mph) in 2019 round out the top five.
According to Sarah Langs, Cruz is the third player with two homers measured by Statcast at 114+ mph in the same game, joining New York Yankees slugger Giancarlo Stanton (Oct. 6, 2020) and then-Chicago White Sox infielder Matt Davidson (March 29, 2018).
Only three Twins players managed to knock multiple homers out of the park at an older age than Cruz, who was 40 years and 278 days old Monday — Paul Molitor (1997), Jim Thome (2011) and Dave Winfield (twice; 1993-94).
Cruz now has the second-most career home runs at Comerica Park for any visiting player (19), second only to Ortiz (23).
Maybe next time the Twins play Detroit, the Tigers will smarten up and just give Cruz a free pass to first base.
Our favorite 40-year-old still has plenty of pop in that bat.