Aaron Judge wasted no time making his introduction to the Kansas City Royals fans at Kauffman Stadium on Tuesday evening. During the top of the first inning, Judge also introduced himself to Royals starter Noah Cameron, taking the first hittable pitch he saw and obliterating it for a 469-foot home run that nearly left the stadium.
Judge's home run wound up in rather rare territory at Kauffman Stadium, as the ball finally touched down above the stadium's scoreboard and parked itself in the Royals' Hall of Fame.
Aaron Judge DEMOLISHED this baseball 🤯
— Sports Illustrated (@SInow) June 10, 2025
(via @Yankees)pic.twitter.com/bMtRBQ1AM2
It was Judge's 24th home run of the season, which ranks second in the American League behind Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh.
There was absolutely no doubt about the outcome of that play from the moment the ball left his bat. MLB fans were beyond awestruck over Judge's 469-foot blast, and they raved about the reigning AL MVP on social media in the aftermath.
Aaron Judge just hit a home run that almost went over the Royals’ Hall of Fame at Kauffman Stadium. Estimated distance: 469 feet. I’ve been to hundreds of games here and never seen a ball hit there.
— Jeff Passan (@JeffPassan) June 10, 2025
Aaron Judge is an animal
— Josh Hart (@joshhart) June 10, 2025
Just when I think there’s nothing Aaron Judge can do to surprise me anymore he hits a ball where I’ve never seen a ball hit in Kauffman Stadium
— AT (@YankeeWRLD) June 10, 2025
The greatest I’ll ever watch pic.twitter.com/Akvk9YXywQ
Aaron Judge isn’t human
— Jordan Raanan (@JordanRaanan) June 10, 2025
It is an honor and privilege to watch Aaron Judge in his prime.
— Yankees Analytics Nerds (@YankeesNerds) June 10, 2025
WHERE DID THAT JUDGE HOMER GO
— Big Game Bengal (@BengalYouTube) June 10, 2025
I have no idea what to say about Aaron Judge
— Ryan Garcia (@RyanGarciaESM) June 10, 2025
Just another day for the best hitter in MLB.
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This article was originally published on www.si.com as Aaron Judge's 469-Foot Home Run in Kansas City Left Baseball World in Disbelief.