The Corner Wire | All Things Guardians
🔥 All Things Chase DeLauter
The long-awaited Guardians prospect is off to a ridiculous start, and for now, we’re all just along for the ride.
🚀 1. A Start That Doesn’t Make Sense
Let’s just say it: this is absurd.
Chase DeLauter has already launched 3 home runs in his first 2 games, and he’s done it in only about 10 innings of actual game action. That’s not just a hot start. That’s cartoon baseball.
Naturally, that means we should do the totally responsible thing and stretch this out over a full season.
Three home runs in 10 innings puts DeLauter on pace for about 273 home runs over a full 162-game season.
Yes, 273.
That would not just break records. That would absolutely vaporize them.
Is it realistic? Of course not. Is it hilarious and fun to talk about while the bat is on fire? Absolutely.
🏆 2. The Record Chase We’re Pretending Is Real
At his current pace, DeLauter would blow past the biggest single-season home run totals the sport has ever seen.
Here are the names that own the real mountain:
- Barry Bonds – 73 home runs in 2001
- Mark McGwire – 70 home runs in 1998
- Sammy Sosa – 66 home runs in 1998
- Aaron Judge – 62 home runs in 2022
At 273, Chase DeLauter would not merely break those records. He would almost quadruple some of them and turn the record book into a comedy sketch.
Obviously, reality is coming. Pitchers will adjust. Cold streaks will happen. The league will stop throwing him anything remotely hittable. That part is guaranteed.
But the reason this is worth talking about is simple: even though the pace is ridiculous, the power itself is very real.
🧬 3. The Chase DeLauter Story
This isn’t some random out-of-nowhere baseball miracle. Guardians fans have been hearing the name Chase DeLauter for a while now, and for good reason.
DeLauter grew up in the Maryland and West Virginia area and developed into one of the most intriguing bats in amateur baseball. He went on to star at James Madison University, where he built the reputation that made him one of the most exciting hitters in the 2022 draft class.
At JMU, he was a monster. He hit for average, got on base, drove the ball, and looked like the kind of hitter who could become a complete offensive force. Big frame. Big leverage. Big raw power. But he wasn’t just a slugger. He also showed discipline and polish at the plate.
That combination is what made him so appealing to Cleveland when the Guardians selected him in the first round of the 2022 MLB Draft.
Since then, his prospect path has had both hype and frustration. The talent has always been obvious. The issue has been staying on the field. Injuries slowed portions of his climb through the system, which is part of why fans have been waiting so long for the full breakout.
But when healthy, the production has backed up the buzz.
Throughout his prospect years, DeLauter has looked like the kind of hitter the Guardians system does not produce every day: a physically imposing outfielder with legitimate middle-of-the-order power and the ability to impact a game with one swing.
That’s why this current power surge feels loud. It’s not just because the home runs are leaving in bunches. It’s because this is the exact type of upside people have been dreaming on for years.
âšľ 4. What It Means for the Guardians
No, Chase DeLauter is not going to hit 273 home runs.
But that’s not really the point.
The point is that Guardians fans might finally be watching the arrival of a bat that changes the feel of the lineup.
Cleveland has built a strong identity around contact, pitching, pressure, and development. What this team has often lacked is a true power threat who feels dangerous every single time he steps into the box.
DeLauter has the chance to be that guy.
Realistically, the numbers will level out. The home run pace will come back to earth in a hurry. That’s how baseball works. But if he stays healthy and keeps adjusting, this can still turn into a huge story for the 2026 Guardians.
Maybe he doesn’t chase 273. Maybe he doesn’t sniff 73. Maybe he doesn’t touch any record at all.
But if he becomes a real middle-of-the-order force, a 25-to-35 home run type bat, and a lineup anchor this franchise can build around, that’s more than enough.
For now, though, it’s fair to say this:
Chase DeLauter is on fire, Guardians fans are dreaming big, and “All Things Guardians” has officially become “All Things Chase.”
