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Due to global warming, major league hitters are slugging more home

Due to global warming, major league hitters are slugging more home

Major League Baseball has seen an average of 58 more home runs each season since 2010. The apparent reason: reduced friction on the balls in warmer air.

Muncy hits 2 more homers, powers Dodgers past Giants 10-5

Astros slug their way to the top of the AL West with 16 homers in 3 games to sweep Rangers – NewsNation

Baseball Players Are Hitting More Home Runs--And Climate Change Is Helping

Spike in Major League Baseball homeruns attributed to climate change •

How Mookie Betts became baseball's unlikeliest home run slugger - Los Angeles Times

After Ezequiel Tovar's rapid rise through minors, who's next to provoke that kind of excitement? - DNVR Sports

Major League Baseball's Great Hitting Depression - WSJ

Climate change is leading to more home runs, study finds

PDF) The Impact of Temperature on Major League Baseball

Average Hit Rate Can Be Better Metric Than Slugging Percentage for Fantasy Managers - Sports Illustrated

Teoscar Hernández trade gives Mariners a big bat while the Blue Jays add flexibility - The Boston Globe

Should MLB sluggers thank climate change for the surge in home runs? - Study Finds

Spike in major league home runs tied to clima

Spike in Major League Home Runs Tied to Climate Change

Why Baseball Home Runs Are More Common: Climate Change