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Global warming is 'juicing home runs' in Major League Baseball, Dartmouth study finds

Climate change is making major league sluggers into even hotter hitters, sending an extra 50 or so home runs a year over the fences, a new study found.

Players and executives say the research fits with what they've seen on the field

A baseball player swings his bat as he hits a home run.
Bo Bichette of the Toronto Blue Jays hits a home run during the seventh inning of a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals on April 3 in Kansas City, Mo. (Reed Hoffman/The Associated Press)

Climate change is making major league sluggers into even hotter hitters, sending an extra 50 or so home runs a year over the fences, a new study found.

Hotter, thinner air that allows balls to fly farther contributed a tiny bit to a surge in home runs since 2010, according to a statistical analysis by New Hampshire's Dartmouth College scientists published in Friday's Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. They analyzed 100,000 major league games and more than 200,000 balls put into play in the last few years along with weather conditions, stadiums and other factors.

"Global warming is juicing home runs in Major League Baseball," said study co-author Justin Mankin, a Dartmouth climate scientist.

It's basic physics.

Air less dense

When air heats up, molecules move faster and away from each other, making the air less dense. Baseballs launched off a bat go farther through thinner air because there's less resistance to slow the ball. Just a little bit farther can mean the difference between a homer and a flyout, said Alan Nathan, a University of Illinois physicist who wasn't part of the Dartmouth study.

Nathan, one of a group of scientists who has consulted with Major League Baseball on the increase in homers, did his own simple calculation, based purely on known physics of ballistics and air density as it changes with temperature, and said he got the same result as the Dartmouth researchers.

Both Nathan and the Dartmouth team found a 1.8-per-cent increase in home run likelihood with each degree Celsius the air warms. Total yearly average of warming-aided homers is only one per cent of all home runs hit, the Dartmouth researchers calculated.

LISTEN | Climate change is a boon for baseball's power hitters: 


Non-climate factors contribute even more to the barrage of balls flying out of the park, scientists and baseball veterans said. The biggest is the ball and the size of the stitches, Nathan said, and MLB made slight adjustments to deaden the ball prior to the 2021 season. Others include batters' recent attention to launch angle; stronger hitters; and faster pitches. The study started after the end of baseball's infamous steroids era saw a spike in home runs.

Veteran baseball players and executives said the research fits with what they've seen on the field.

"We always felt that way for years," Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said. "When it's warmer, the ball travels more and they have scientific evidence to back that up."

A large American flag is unfurled in the outfield at Wrigley Field in Chicago.
An American flag is unfurled in the outfield at Wrigley Field in Chicago before the opening day baseball game between the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers on March 30. ((AP Photo/Erin Hooley))

Homers have always varied by ballpark due to simple factors like dimensions that are friendlier to pitchers than hitters, or vice versa, as well as wind conditions.

The Dartmouth team found the climate homer effect varied by field, too. Chicago's Wrigley Field, which still hosts a lot of day games, has the most warming-homer friendly confines. The statistical analysis found no significant heat-aided homers at Tampa's Tropicana Field, the only full-time domed stadium in Major League Baseball.

"It's interesting to think about," said five-time All-Star pitcher David Cone, who once threw a perfect game and is now a television baseball analyst. "I'd probably more likely look at the makeup of the baseball itself, the variances and the specs. Of course, weather matters; definitely I wouldn't shoo it away."

A baseball pitcher throws a pitch.
Colorado Rockies relief pitcher Brent Suter throws a pitch during a game in SAn Diego on April 2. (Alex Gallardo/The Associated Press)

After a 1-0 victory on Thursday at Denver's Coors Field, Colorado Rockies reliever Brent Suter said the study, which mentions more than 500 home runs since 2010, rings true to him.

"Obviously I'm not a fan in any way as a pitcher," Suter said with a laugh. "500 seems a lot, but I could believe it."

The heat is also hard on players and fans, Suter said: "I remember pitching some games, I was just like, 'This does not feel like normal heat. It's crazy hot."'

Mankin called what's happening "a fingerprint of climate change on our recreation."

Christopher Callahan, another climate researcher at Dartmouth, said what's been seen so far is nothing compared to projections of hundreds of extra homers in the future.

How many extra homers depends on how hot it gets, which depends on how much greenhouse gas the world spews from the burning of coal, oil and gas. Callahan ran different scenarios of carbon pollution through computer simulations.

In the worst-case warming trajectory — which some scientists say the world is no longer on based on recent emissions — there would be about 192 warming-aided homers a year by 2050 and around 467 hot home runs by the year 2100. In more moderate carbon pollution scenarios, closer to where Earth is now tracking, there would be about 155 warming-aided homers a year by 2050 and around 255 extra home runs at the end of the century, Callahan said.

Because baseball has so many statistics and analytics, such as the tracking system Statcast, trends can be seen more easily than other effects of climate change, Mankin said. Still, the scientists can't point to a single homer and say that's a warming-aided home run. It's a detail that can be only seen in the more than 63,000 homers hit since 2010.

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