The music hit. The crowd exploded. The internet went wild.
And then⦠he admitted he doesnāt even listen to it.
It started as a jaw-dropping moment at Petco Parkāand within hours, it became one of baseballās most unexpected viral sensations.
When Mason Miller sprinted out of the bullpen for his first save opportunity with the San Diego Padres, the stadium didnāt just eruptāit shook. Blasting through the speakers was the iconic, aggressive opening of āBlindā by Korn, a track more commonly associated with mosh pits than Major League Baseball.
Fans were stunned. Teammates were hyped. Social media? Completely obsessed.
Clips of Millerās entrance spread like wildfire, with fans praising the sheer intensity of the moment. It felt cinematicādark, electric, and almost intimidating. For a closer stepping into the ninth inning, it was the perfect storm of adrenaline and chaos.
But then came the twist no one saw coming.
Miller casually revealed after the game that the now-viral walkout song⦠wasnāt even his choice.

āI donāt listen to that kind of scene,ā he admitted. Instead, the right-hander said his playlist leans heavily toward country and Christian musicāa stark contrast to the raw aggression of Kornās sound.
So how did one of baseballās most talked-about entrances happen?
Simpleāand hilarious.
Miller never picked a walkout song before the season, leaving the decision in the hands of the Padres clubhouse staff. And they didnāt hold back. The result? A heavy metal anthem that instantly transformed his entrance into a viral spectacle.
Despite the disconnect, Miller embraced the moment.
āI mean, itās a little scary, for sure,ā he said with a grin. āIt kind of captures a good ominous vibe coming into the game.ā
That āominous vibeā translated directly onto the field.
Fueled by the roaring crowd and electric atmosphere, Miller delivered when it mattered mostālocking down the save with two strikeouts and securing the Padresā first win of the season. The performance only amplified the legend of the moment, turning a random song choice into a defining early-season highlight.
And the internet hasnāt let it go since.
Fans continue to share the clip, remix it, and celebrate the unexpected pairing of a calm, soft-spoken pitcher with one of metalās most intense tracks. Itās the kind of contrast that feels almost too perfectāand thatās exactly why it works.
Millerās rise to this moment has been just as compelling.
After joining San Diego in a midseason trade from the Oakland Athletics last year, he quickly established himself as a dominant bullpen force. When former closer Robert Suarez departed in free agency, the Padres didnāt hesitateāMiller was the next man up.
And the numbers back it up.
Across 60 appearances last season between Oakland and San Diego, he posted a stellar 2.63 ERA with 22 saves, proving he has both the consistency and composure to handle high-pressure situations.
Now, heās not just closing gamesāheās becoming a personality fans canāt ignore.
Because in a sport often defined by tradition and predictability, moments like this break through the noise. A country-music-loving pitcher walking out to Korn shouldnāt workābut somehow, it does.
And thatās what makes it unforgettable.
As the season unfolds, the Padres will rely heavily on Miller to anchor the bullpen and slam the door in tight games. But if his first appearance is any indication, he wonāt just be closing gamesā
Heāll be creating moments.
And whether or not he ever changes his playlist, one thing is clear: when āBlindā hits the speakers, the baseball world will be watching.
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