The biggest hitters in Major League Baseball stepped up to the plate on Monday night for the 2026 MLB All-Star Home Run Derby in Philadelphia.
This year, the Home Run Derby featured a new format and a new way for fans to watch all the action in the City of Brotherly Love.
St. Louis Cardinals right fielder Jordan Walker was crowned the 2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby champion.
Walker hit 12 home runs in the final round of the night against Philadelphia Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber, who hit 11 homers. Overall, Walker hit a combined 5,558 feet during the derby, according to MLB.
Walker received the Home Run Derby Trophy, designed by Tiffany & Co., and posed for photos afterward with his family, including his father Derek Walker.
This year's event was held at Citizens Bank Park.
Gates opened for the first on-field event of All-Star Week on Monday at 5 p.m. ET.
The derby was underway by 8 p.m. ET.
For fans not inside Citizens Bank Park, the Home Run Derby was streamed live on Netflix.
Eight power hitters were selected from across the league to participate in this year's derby, which featured three rounds. They included:
The competitors batted over the course of three rounds before one player took home the title of Home Run Derby champion.
Unlike years past, where players had to rack up as many homers as possible in a specific amount of time, each player this year started the rounds with a set number of swings.
Participants had 20 swings each in Round 1, 15 in Round 2 and 15 in the final round, according to MLB.
Whether they hit a home run or not, each swing counted against a participant's total allotment.
If a participant hit a home run on their final swing of a round, they could keep swinging until they no longer hit one out, according to MLB.
The participants with the top four home run totals after the first round moved on to the semifinals and were seeded based on their first-round totals.
They faced off head-to-head (No. 1 vs. No. 4 and No. 2 vs. No. 3) to determine the two finalists.
For anyone who couldn't tune into the livestream -- or anyone who just wanted to keep tabs on the count in multiple places -- MLB featured a virtual tracker that showed each participant's hit count with trajectory and distance included.
The tracker was available online with live data throughout the event.
Ahead of this year's Home Run Derby, the expert baseball analysts at ESPN shared their top picks among Monday's competitors for who they believed could hit the most homers, who would have the longest hits and more, including top highlight moment predictions.
Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh didn't return this year to defend his 2025 title, but he racked up an impressive 18 home runs to defeat Caminero in the finals last year at Truist Park in Atlanta.
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