Video Greatest Defensive Game EVER? Jo Adell Robs THREE Home Runs! | The Ricky Cobb Show Jo Adell just pulled off something you may NEVER see again — robbing THREE home runs in a single game vs the Mariners. Is this the greatest defensive performance in MLB history? Ricky Cobb reacts like only the Super 70s Sports Guy can ....
All eyes are on today's NFL Draft, but I doubt it'll produce anything like what Major League Baseball gave us Wednesday night.
Not one, but two "once-in-a-lifetime" moments, which is saying something given baseball is, after all, America's oldest pastime. Alas, you still see things you've never quite seen before, even 200 years after Abner Doubleday invented this great game.
Oneil Cruz of the Pittsburgh Pirates hits a three-run home run against the Texas Rangers during the ninth inning at Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas, on April 22, 2026. (Ron Jenkins/Getty Images)
Yes, I know that piece of history is widely debated. But, I stand with our great civil war general!
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Anyway, where should we start? Let's go in chronological order, shall we? Let's first head out to Texas, where Pirates slugger Oneil Cruz hit a home run to a place I'm fairly certain no ball has ever landed ...
Goodness gracious. Have you ever seen a ball land there? I certainly haven't, and I've played, and watched, a lot of baseball over the past 20 years. Never seen that before. Impressive.
ANGELS OUTFIELDER JO ADELL INCREDIBLY ROBS THREE HOME RUNS IN WIN: ‘GREATEST DEFENSIVE GAME I’VE EVER SEEN’
Just for good measure, Cruz's piss missile clocked in at a solid 116.9 mph exit velo, making it the hardest-hit ball this season. Analytics tells us it traveled 432 feet, which, frankly, seems low to me. But whatever.
Seattle Mariners starting pitcher Logan Gilbert reacts after a batted ball was trapped beneath his jersey against the Athletics during the first inning at T-Mobile Park in Seattle, Wash., on April 22, 2026. The play was ruled a hit. (Joe Nicholson/Imagn Images)
Cruz, by the way, holds the MLB record for hardest-hit ball of the statcast era at 122.9 mph last season.
"That ball was killed," Pirates manager Don Kelly said.
Again, I'm quite certain that I've never seen that before. Pitchers take liners off the body all the time. It's one of the more (most?) dangerous aspects of the game.
But for one to land inside the jersey? Never seen it. What are the odds of that happening? They have to be astronomical, right? Everything has to line up perfectly.
Now, I don't quite understand why this wasn't ruled an out. Seems silly to me. The ball never hit the ground. What are we doing here?
Umpires Adrian Johnson and Ramon De Jesus examine a bat belonging to Taylor Trammell of the Houston Astros during the ninth inning against the New York Yankees at Daikin Park in Houston, Texas, on Sept. 4, 2025. (Alex Slitz/Getty Images)
Technically, though, the MLB rulebook does state that a catch must be made with a glove or barehand, "providing he does not use his cap, protector, pocket or any other part of his uniform in getting possession."
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Fine. Whatever. Fair is fair, and I reckon this was the right call. Still seems lame to me.
And I'm quite sure Abner Doubleday would've agreed!
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