# MLB Due for a Homer — April 25, 2026

> These 3 hitters have elite Statcast power numbers but fewer HRs than expected. With favorable matchups today, they're the most likely regression candidates on the slate.

**Date:** 2026-04-25  
**Author:** HeatCheck HQ  
**Tags:** MLB, Home Runs, Due for HR, Statcast, Daily Picks  
**Full article:** https://heatcheckhq.io/blog/mlb-due-for-hr-apr-25-2026  
**Live picks & dashboards:** https://heatcheckhq.io

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Not every hitter who *should* be hitting home runs *is* hitting home runs. Baseball is random in the short term — a barrel at 108 mph can be a warning-track flyout one day and a 420-foot bomb the next.

These 3 batters have the Statcast profile of power hitters — elite barrel rate, exit velocity, and expected slugging — but their actual HR totals haven't caught up. With favorable matchups on today's slate, they're the top regression candidates.

## 1. Mike Trout (LAA)

*24.6% barrel · 104.1 mph EV · 0.720 xSLG · 43.1% FB · 8 HR · 0.684 platoon SLG · vs Cole Ragans (LHP) · 2.57 opp HR/9 (exploitable)*

Few hitters are squaring the ball up like Mike Trout. A 24.6% barrel rate is rare air. A 43% fly ball rate is the variable that separates "loud outs" from souvenirs — he is putting balls in the air at exactly the right rate. 8 on the season is fine, but the Statcast inputs argue for more.

## 2. Yordan Alvarez (HOU)

*21.2% barrel · 104.9 mph EV · 0.868 xSLG · 47.1% FB · 11 HR · 0.939 platoon SLG · vs Ryan Weathers (LHP) · 1.28 opp HR/9*

When Yordan Alvarez connects, the ball travels. 21.2% barrel rate is doing real damage on the rare swings he's making count. A 47% fly ball rate is the variable that separates "loud outs" from souvenirs — he is putting balls in the air at exactly the right rate. 11 HR through the early going understates what this batted-ball profile should produce.

## 3. Munetaka Murakami (CWS)

*24.5% barrel · 106.5 mph EV · 0.649 xSLG · 41.5% FB · 10 HR · 0.609 platoon SLG · vs Jake Irvin (RHP) · 1.50 opp HR/9 (exploitable)*

Munetaka Murakami's 24.5% barrel rate sits in MLB's top tier — the kind of contact profile that turns into homers in bunches. A 42% fly ball rate is the variable that separates "loud outs" from souvenirs — he is putting balls in the air at exactly the right rate. 10 on the season is fine, but the Statcast inputs argue for more.

## How We Find "Due" Hitters

Our dinger model combines 12 Statcast and matchup factors. Full details on the [Due for a Homer dashboard](/mlb/due-for-hr).

The key stats that predict HR regression:
- **Barrel %** — the best single predictor of home runs. Barrels are batted balls with the optimal combination of exit velocity and launch angle.
- **Exit Velocity** — how hard they hit the ball. 95+ mph is elite.
- **xSLG** — expected slugging based on batted ball quality, independent of luck.
- **Fly Ball %** — ground balls can't be home runs. Higher FB% = more HR opportunities.

When a hitter has elite numbers in all four and fewer HRs than expected, regression (in the positive direction) is likely.

## Research These Players

- [Hitter vs Pitcher](/mlb/hitter-vs-pitcher) — career H2H stats for every batter vs today's opposing pitcher
- [Hitter vs Pitch Mix](/mlb/hitting-stats) — per-pitch breakdown with barrel rate, EV, and ISO by pitch type
- [Best Bats](/mlb/best-bats) — 10-factor composite scoring model for today's top prop picks
- [Weather](/mlb/weather) — wind and temperature conditions at every ballpark

## Related Guides

- [Finding Undervalued HR Hitters](/blog/finding-undervalued-home-run-hitters)
- [Hitter vs Pitcher Matchup Guide](/blog/hitter-vs-pitcher-matchup-guide)
- [MLB Stats Explained](/blog/mlb-stats-explained)


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*Data powered by HeatCheck HQ — sports analytics platform. Free tools at https://heatcheckhq.io*
