Chicago White Sox first baseman Munetaka Murakami launched a 431-foot home run in the sixth inning to help secure a 6-3 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays at Rate Field. The blast gave the White Sox the lead they would not relinquish and marked several firsts for the Japanese rookie. Manager Will Venable praised Murakami's impact on and off the field.
With the White Sox trailing 2-3 in the bottom of the sixth and Miguel Vargas on second after a double, Murakami stepped up against Toronto left-hander Brendon Little. The rookie slugged a Statcast-projected 431-foot home run to center field with an exit velocity of 111.1 mph, pushing three runs across for a 5-3 lead. Colson Montgomery followed with his second homer of the season, chasing Little after four batters and three extra-base hits. The White Sox held on for their first series win of the year and went 2-0 at home for the first time since 2022. Murakami called it the best result off his bat and expressed joy at playing before the home crowd. Through interpreter Kenzo Yagi, he said, “I’m happy to play in front of them. It was always a dream for me to play here and then hit in front of the crowd here at Rate Field. I just want to keep continuing this process.” Venable lauded the slugger, saying, “He's built for this. He's been everything that we imagined as far as his impact in the clubhouse, who he is as a person, his play on the field defensively, as well as the power and plate discipline.” The home run was Murakami's fourth in his first eight MLB games, the most by any Japanese-born player and the first White Sox rookie to achieve that mark, according to Elias Sports Bureau. It was his first off a lefty, first at home after three in Milwaukee, and gave him three RBIs for the first time. Defensively, despite an earlier error, Murakami cut off a throw from right fielder Tristan Peters in the seventh and gunned down Toronto's Tyler Heineman at third with the bases loaded, stranding Vladimir Guerrero Jr. on deck. Venable noted, “Starting with Tristan hitting the cutoff guy is huge right there. That's something we preach. We know it's fundamental baseball. That was a huge out to get.” Montgomery echoed confidence in the lineup, saying, “Me and Mune both, we have all the confidence in the world that we can face whoever, and we know we can compete against whoever.”