The New York Mets have 33 home runs as a team at home games this season, which is 7th-best in all of MLB. Mets left fielder Brandon Nimmo, however, has eight home runs on the year, but only one of them has come at Citi Field.
This seems like a strange split, and could suggest some bad luck for Nimmo so far. However, according to a May 29 article from The Athletic's Tim Britton, Nimmo blames this home field power outage on the field itself more so than any factors that are under his control.
In the article, Nimmo is portrayed comparing two balls he has hit in games, one from last June that was a 412-foot home run to center field and another from this April, which was a 332-foot flyout to left-center field. Both balls were hit with essentially the same exit velocity, but one traveled 80 feet farther than the other.
BRANDON NIMMO TIES THE GAME WITH HIS 100TH CAREER HOME RUN! pic.twitter.com/SnyF26keiU
— SNY (@SNYtv) June 30, 2024
Since no analyst could give him a reason for this massive gap, Nimmo decided it was because Citi Field is a hard place to hit home runs in during the season's early months.
The article goes on to discuss how advanced analytics say Citi Field is tied for the fourth-hardest park for offense overall. Nimmo (whose career stats show that his power hitting numbers are almost always down in April and May, especially at home) went on to assert that all he can do about this is, "try to stay sane" until June rolls around, when both he and the statistics show that Citi Field becomes an easier place to hit home runs at.
Brandon Nimmo drives in Juan Soto with a double for the first run of the game! pic.twitter.com/EMlMcfvcVF
— SNY Mets (@SNY_Mets) May 13, 2025
The good news for Nimmo is that June is only a couple days away.
More must-reads:
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!