
The Chicago White Sox knew Japanese third baseman Munetaka Murakami could hit for power, but they probably didn't know he had this much pop.
Murakami, 26, homered in the top of the second inning of a 9-7 road loss to the Milwaukee Brewers on Sunday. In doing so, he became the fourth player in MLB history to homer in his first three career games (via ESPN Insights). The others are Cleveland Guardians right fielder Chase DeLauter, former Seattle Mariners/Arizona Diamondbacks outfielder Kyle Lewis and Boston Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story.
"I'm truly grateful and happy that I was able to keep that kind of record, but like I said before, there's still a long way to go and a lot of ways to improve," he said postgame through interpreter Kenzo Yagi, per Scott Merkin of MLB.com. "So, that is what I'll keep on doing in the upcoming days."
If he does, that would make the White Sox feel even better about signing him to a two-year, $34M deal this offseason.
Munetaka Murakami is the 4th player in MLB history to homer in each of his first 3 career games.
— ESPN Insights (@ESPNInsights) March 29, 2026
He joins:
• 2026 Chase DeLauter
• 2019 Kyle Lewis
• 2016 Trevor Story
(via @MLB) pic.twitter.com/mjgkVbCqOm
Murakami spent longer on the free-agent market than expected. The White Sox didn't sign him until December 2025.
Teams knew he had plenty of power, but his high strikeout rate gave them pause during free agency. Per FanGraphs, he posted a 28.6 percent strikeout rate during 224 plate appearances in 2025 with the Tokyo Yakult Swallows in the Nippon Baseball League (the top league in Japan). A strikeout rate over 25 percent is considered poor.
Murakami is off to a fast start, but he could be even better if he refines his plate discipline. Entering Monday, he had logged a 30.8 percent strikeout rate through 13 plate appearances.
"Definitely opposing pitchers are mixing it up, and it's really hard to really find out where they're going to throw," Murakami said. "I study and analyze these situations as much as possible, utilizing even our pitchers as well through the PitchCom, depending on the situation."
If Murakami improves at reading pitches, watch out. He may continue to emerge as an X factor for the White Sox, which would make several teams regret passing on him in free agency.
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