LOS ANGELES -- Juan Soto won $1 million on Monday with a swing that is worth plenty more.
Shaking off trade rumors that threatened to sully his All-Star week, Soto beat a legend and held off a rookie to win the Home Run Derby and the big-money prize that accompanied it in front of a sold-out Dodger Stadium crowd.
After recently turning down a 15-year, $440 million contract extension from the Washington Nationals, Soto arrived in Los Angeles early Monday morning with his future in doubt ahead of the Aug. 2 trade deadline. He emerged unbothered. When asked before the Derby whether he was going to win it, his answer was characteristically Soto: "Probably." And on that prediction he came through, vanquishing Albert Pujols in the semifinals andJulio Rodriguezin the finals.
"I'm a lone survivor," Soto said. "I've been going through all this stuff, and I'm still here standing up and with my chin up, all the time. And that shows you I can go through anything."
Anything, in this case, included a day of answering questions he can't possibly answer, including whether the Nationals will trade him before the Aug. 2 deadline or where he might wind up. Soto instead worried about his powerful left-handed swing, shooting balls to all fields and finishing the finals with 19 home runs to the 18 of his Dominican Republic countryman Rodríguez.
At 23 years, 266 days old, Soto became the second-youngest Derby champion -- just a day older than 1993 winner Juan Gonzalez.
Until the finals, the Derby had been the latest episode of the J-Rod Show. Rodriguez, the precocious 21-year-old Seattle Mariners outfielder, ambushed the field Monday night, ousting the two-time defending champion and smashing 81 home runs.
The first hitter of the night, Rodriguez set the tone for his showing with 32 home runs in his first-round matchup against the Texas Rangers' Corey Seager. Then came Pete Alonso, the New York Mets slugger who won the last two competitions in 2019 and 2021 but mustered only 23 home runs in the semifinals, well short of Rodriguez's 31.
Then came his matchup with Soto, against whom, Rodriguez said, he used to play Call of Duty games. Rodriguez was better at COD. Soto, at least on Monday, was superior at HRD.
"What did I show the fans?" Rodriguez said. "Who I am, I guess. They know a little bit now."
Rodriguez, who is earning the MLB minimum salary of $700,000 this year, received a $500,000 bonus as the runner-up.
Soto was locked in from the beginning, beating Cleveland Guardians third baseman Jose Ramirez in the first round and St. Louis Cardinals great Pujols in the semifinals. Pujols, 42, is in his final season -- and upsetPhiladelphia'sKyle Schwarber, the No. 1 seed, in the first round, beating him in an overtime period. He couldn't keep up with Soto, whose 482-foot home run in the first round was the longest of the night.
"I wasn't sure if I should beat him or let him beat me, but just the respect -- I respect him a lot," Soto said. "Even though I beat him at the end of the day, it's just a competition. He knows how much I'm proud of him and how much talent he brings to all the generations and advice that he gives to us."
Whatever Soto's future, wherever he winds up, whether he's moved before this deadline or after, he said he would walk away from this All-Star week sure of one thing.
"I will be a Home Run Derby champion forever," he said.