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Adolis García Got the Luckiest Hit on a Pitch That Glanced Off the Knob of His Bat

That’s not the part you’re supposed to hit the ball with.
Adolis García Got the Luckiest Hit on a Pitch That Glanced Off the Knob of His Bat
Adolis García Got the Luckiest Hit on a Pitch That Glanced Off the Knob of His Bat

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Rangers outfielder Adolis García has a five-game hit streak going, but not all of those hits are created equal. 

On Wednesday, he hit a grand slam against the Astros that led both benches to clear. On Sunday, he kept his streak alive with a weak dribbler that he hit off the very end of his bat. 

Facing Blake Snell in third inning of the game in San Diego, García checked his swing on an inside fastball. He barely started the swing, but moved his bat just enough that the knob was facing toward the mound. Improbably, the ball glanced off tiny bit of exposed wood and skittered past Snell. Second baseman Ha-Seong Kim’s only hope of making a play was to flip the ball with his glove, but García reached safely by just a hair. 

It’s even more impressive that García was able to reach safely considering he didn’t immediately start running to first. After the ball hit the knob of the bat, he recoiled in pain before realizing that it had actually ricocheted into fair territory. You know it had to have hurt because he was still grimacing after he ran to first. 

Oh, and if you’re wondering about the exit velocity of a ball hit off the knob of the bat, Statcast measured it at 43.0 mph


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Dan Gartland
DAN GARTLAND

Dan Gartland writes Sports Illustrated’s flagship daily newsletter, SI:AM, and is the host of the “Stadium Wonders” video series. He joined the SI staff in 2014, having previously been published on Deadspin and Slate. Gartland, a graduate of Fordham University, is a former Sports Jeopardy! champion (Season 1, Episode 5).