A's new home run celebration is amazing, but also somewhat terrifying

April 11th, 2026

NEW YORK -- A mysterious giant gold chain featuring the head of an elephant sat at the locker of Luis Severino earlier this week, piquing the curiosity of several Athletics players who walked into the visiting clubhouse at Yankee Stadium.

Turns out, Severino ordered the chain and had it delivered on Tuesday for the start of this six-game road trip against the two New York teams. The chain was supposed to be the team’s new home run celebration, but the problem was that the A’s had gone homerless over the first four games of the trip, leaving the chain mostly untouched and collecting dust.

During Saturday’s 11-6 victory over the Mets at Citi Field, the A’s finally debuted their new homer celebration for 2026. After clobbered a two-run blast off Kodai Senga in the third -- the first of his two big flies on the afternoon -- and returned to the dugout, Lawrence Butler draped the chain around his neck.

But there was more to this celebration.

As Soderstrom made his way through the high-five line with teammates inside the dugout, he stopped towards the end of the bench in front of Severino, who pulled out a black leather elephant mask -- complete with a trunk and tusks -- and placed it on top of Soderstrom’s head, completing the chain and mask combo that will be awarded to all homering A’s players going forward.

Later in the inning, launched a Statcast-projected 406-foot three-run shot to right-center. Upon returning to the dugout, he pulled the mask down on his head from Severino and appeared to be making elephant noises, much to the delight of teammates and coaches.

The chain and the mask appear to be an ode to A’s mascot Stomper, the big and jolly elephant who roams the stands during A’s home games. This elephant, however, looks a bit more menacing, some could say terrifying, with its dark green eyes.

Soderstrom earned the elephant chain and mask again in the eighth with a booming 420-foot three-run shot that was much-needed. Before that, what was a 7-1 lead entering the fifth had dwindled to 7-6 heading into the eighth.

Despite going without a home run over the previous four games, the A’s found a way to go 3-1 in that stretch with good pitching and timely hitting. But at its core, this young A’s squad prides itself as a team that thrives on the long ball with its high-powered offense, and Saturday finally saw a return to that version with 15 hits, including three big homers that accounted for eight of their 11 runs.