Yankees' Jazz Chisholm reveals why he Euro-steps after every home run he hits

Billy Heyen

Yankees' Jazz Chisholm reveals why he Euro-steps after every home run he hits image

Jazz Chisholm Jr. Knows how to have a good time on the baseball field.

In very few ways is that more apparent than when the New York Yankees star hits a home run.

When Chisholm crosses home plate, every time, he does a Euro step.

That's a basketball move, in which a player driving to the basket sidesteps one way, then back the other way, often sneaking past the defender with the misdirection. It's a move that the likes of Manu Ginobli and James Harden have made famous.

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Chisholm does it at the end of his home runs, dodging around an invisible defender in front of home plate.

And in a new video shared by SNY, Chisholm revealed why -- it's something he just does in his every-day life, too.

"When I was 12 years old, I used to go through the hallways and whenever I would walk past someone, I would euro-step them and do a shot," Chisholm said. "I still to it to people walking around the street today."

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Chisholm gets to do this celebration plenty. In 2025, he hit a career-high 31 home runs. He has 108 MLB home runs through 579 career games between the Marlins and Yankees.

Chisholm hit his career-high in just 130 games last season, so if he can stay healthy for a full season, there might be even more Euro-stepping in his future.

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