Sluggin’ infielder slash designated hitter Eugenio Suárez belted 49 homers between time spent with the Arizona Diamondbacks and Seattle Mariners in 2025. He blasted 49 homers for the Cincinnati Reds back in 2019, too, a year when everyone was seemingly blastin’ dingers at a record clip.
He’s done it when everyone was doing it, and he’s done it when none of the Reds were. He’s a homer-bashing machine with 325 of them already on his ledger, and a quick glance at some of the underlying metrics behind his swing suggest he’s not about to immediately slow down at age 34 in 2026.
For instance…
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Per Statcast, his 113.8 maximum exit velocity in 2025 was actually the highest mark of his career
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His Barrel/PA of 8.7 last season was his highest since 2021 (8.9) and the second highest of any season in his career
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The 21.9 degree launch angle from last season was the highest of his career, continuing an upward trend that began by jumping up to 17.7 degrees in 2019 from 14.8 degrees in 2018 – in other words, he’s implemented a continuous plan to hit moonballs, and it’s working!
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The 47.6% hard-hit rate he posted in 2025 was far and away the best of his career, as were the 57 total Barrels off his bat
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The 26.5% fast-swing rate – meaning the rate at which he swung a bat faster than 75 mph – was the best single-season mark of his career since they began tracking that in 2023, and was up a full 5% from his 21.5% mark in 2024
He’s a fundamentally different hitter than he was during that brilliant 2019 campaign with the Reds, but the game itself is fundamentally different now, too. What isn’t fundamentally different now, though, is that a) Great American Ball Park is still a homer-honkin’ launching pad and b) Geno Suárez can still very much knock the crud out of the ball, and does so mostly into the air. In fact, his 50.4% fly-ball rate (per FanGraphs) ranked as athe 4th highest among the 145 qualified hitters in the game last season, with Seattle teammate Cal Raleigh (he of the 60 smashed dingers of his own) leading the pack at over 57%.
Factor in that he’s on a one-year ‘prove it’ contract, and there’s every reason to believe Suárez is going to belt 40, 50, even 123 homers in a Reds uniform in 2026.
What say you?
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