Luke Raley’s Inside-the-Park Home Run Defied Logic Thanks to Oracle Park

The Giants got burned by their own stadium on this wacky trip around the bases.
Luke Raley’s Inside-the-Park Home Run Defied Logic Thanks to Oracle Park
Luke Raley’s Inside-the-Park Home Run Defied Logic Thanks to Oracle Park /

One of baseball’s most endearing quirks is that not all ballparks have the same dimensions. While it seems preposterous to think of a basketball court with hoops of differing heights, or a football field that’s 130 yards long, baseball stadiums are like snowflakes: no two are alike.

In the case of the Giants’ Oracle Park, one of the stadium’s defining features are its deep and angular outfield fences, which jut out in different directions like a Picasso Cubist painting. While aesthetically pleasing to some, that setup can cause havoc on outfielders simply trying to defend their position. And, in the case of Rays outfielder Luke Raley’s sixth-inning at-bat on Wednesday, can burn the home team in the process.

Raley crushed a ball to right-center field that took an absurd carom off the wall—and actually rode atop the fence for a bit—turning the San Francisco outfield into the site of a mad dash and ultimately fruitless chase, allowing Raley to circle the bases for an inside-the-park homer.

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The moment brings to mind the famous inside-the-park home run that Ichiro Suzuki hit at the 2007 All-Star Game in San Francisco, though this one was perhaps even more unusual given how the ball seemingly defied physics by not skipping over the center field fence.

Let this latest instance be a lesson to any outfielders that find themselves roaming the grass at Oracle Park: Expect the unexpected.


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Nick Selbe
NICK SELBE

Nick Selbe is a programming editor at Sports Illustrated who frequently writes about baseball and college sports. Before joining SI in March 2020 as a breaking/trending news writer, he worked for MLB Advanced Media, Yahoo Sports and Bleacher Report. Selbe received a bachelor's in communication from the University of Southern California.