The Physics of a Monumental Swing

The numbers tell the story of a swing that defied expectations. Tovar’s 441-foot homer—verified by Statcast’s tracking system—landed in the lower deck of Coors Field’s right-field stands, an area where only the most elite hitters can find gaps. For context, that distance exceeds the outfield fence at every MLB stadium except the Arizona Diamondbacks’ Chase Field (484 feet to straightaway center).

Key metrics from the at-bat:

  • Exit velocity: 114.3 mph (98th percentile for all MLB hitters in 2026)
  • Launch angle: 32.1 degrees (optimal for maximum distance)
  • Time of flight: 4.1 seconds
  • Vertical gain: 142 feet (nearly half the height of the Rockies’ iconic Coors Field scoreboard)

What makes this homer particularly remarkable is the context: Coors Field’s elevation (5,282 feet above sea level) typically inflates home run distances by about 10-12 feet compared to sea-level parks. Tovar’s 441-footer would still rank among the longest home runs of the year even in a traditional ballpark.

Statcast heat map of Tovar’s 441-foot home run trajectory (Image: MLB Advanced Media)