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Who is Blaze Jordan? The former prodigy who hit a 500ft home run and is now starring in MLB

Photo by Steven Garcia/Getty Images
Photo by Steven Garcia/Getty Images
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Blaze Jordan’s name sounded made for baseball long before he reached the Cardinals, and now the old power-prodigy story has finally reached MLB.

The danger is treating him like a finished star after two games.

The more interesting truth is that Jordan has taken a patient road from viral teenage slugger to a real Cardinals opportunity.

Blaze Jordan arrives after viral fame

Jordan became famous before most prospects were even scouted seriously. He won national home run derby events at 11, hit a 395-foot homer at Globe Life Park, then became a viral sensation for launching 500-foot shots at 13.

That power has now shown up in the majors too, with Jordan launching his first MLB home run for St. Louis in just his second big league game.

He later starred at DeSoto Central in Mississippi, the same high school that produced Austin Riley, and committed early to Mississippi State before reclassifying into the 2020 draft class.

That power has now shown up in the majors too, with Jordan launching his first MLB home run for St. Louis in just his second big league game.

By then, the reputation was already huge. Jordan won the 2019 High School Home Run Derby during MLB All-Star week, was named Mississippi’s Gatorade Player of the Year in 2020 and went to the Red Sox in the third round, No. 89 overall, signing for $1.75 million.

Blaze Jordan gives the Cardinals a corner infield answer

Boston eventually sent Jordan to St. Louis for Steven Matz at the 2025 trade deadline, and the move now looks important for a Cardinals team searching for corner infield answers.

St. Louis Cardinals v Minnesota Twins
Photo by Steven Garcia/Getty Images

St. Louis selected his contract on June 12 after optioning Nolan Gorman, then immediately gave Jordan starts at third base. He opened with two hits and an RBI in his MLB debut against Minnesota, then followed it by going 2-for-4 with a triple, a three-run homer, and two runs in a 9-6 win.

That left him 4-for-8 with one homer, four RBI, a .500 average, and a 1.625 OPS after two big league games. Before the call-up, he had hit .313/.373/.548 with 11 homers and 35 RBI in 57 games at Triple-A Memphis.

The player profile is clear. Jordan is a right-handed corner bat, listed at 6-foot-1 and 220 pounds, with plus raw power, strong contact ability, and limited speed. He has played third base, but many evaluators still see first base as his cleanest long-term home.

That makes the future simple and demanding. If the bat keeps playing, Jordan can become a middle-order piece for St. Louis. If the approach gets too aggressive, the defensive margin is thin. For now, the former child prodigy has finally made the leap from internet legend to MLB impact bat.