
If you’re looking for the moment baseball is quietly stealing from pro wrestling and doing it better than anyone wants to admit, it’s the walk from the bullpen to the mound when Mason Miller is coming in to close.
The clip making the rounds this weekend captured exactly why the “closer entrance” has become its own mini event. The lights, the pacing, the crowd swell, the music choice, and the simple fact that everyone in the stadium understands what it means: the game is now down to three outs, and the guy with the flamethrower is here to take them.
Miller’s entrance has a new soundtrack. In a recent game against the Detroit Tigers on March 28, Miller took the mound to Korn’s 1994 track “Blind”, a switch that immediately gave his entrance a heavier, more aggressive feel than a typical bullpen jog.
Mason Miller’s entrance is so badass pic.twitter.com/cNRZA9iarn
— Barstool Sports (@barstoolsports) March 29, 2026
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That kind of change matters because bullpen entrances aren’t background noise anymore. They’re part of the show, and teams know it. Over the last decade, the league has leaned harder into letting closers feel like final bosses: dimmed stadium lights, video board graphics, coordinated sound cues, and fans getting trained to stand up and treat the ninth like a separate act.
It’s not a brand-new idea. Baseball has had iconic closer entrances for years. Mariano Rivera and “Enter Sandman” became synonymous at Yankee Stadium, the kind of pairing that felt like a tradition instead of a playlist decision. And Trevor Hoffman walking out to AC/DC’s “Hells Bells” is still the gold standard for a lot of longtime fans who remember the bells, the timing, and the way it made a save situation feel like a scene.
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What’s changed is the league-wide adoption. Teams have gotten more intentional, and fans have gotten more involved. The entrance is no longer just for the guy on the mound. It’s for the entire stadium. In recent years, some ballparks have turned the ninth into a coordinated light show, with the video board instructing fans to turn on phone flashlights while the house lights drop, building a pre-pitch atmosphere that feels closer to a concert than a baseball inning.
That’s the lane Miller is now driving a truck through. The whole point of a closer entrance is psychological as much as it is entertainment: it signals momentum, raises the temperature, and makes the opposing dugout sit with the reality that the margin for error is gone. When it’s done right, fans remember the entrance almost as much as the final out.
And that’s why clips like this travel. It’s not just a guy running in from the bullpen. It’s the part of the game that feels most like a shared experience, everyone standing at once, everyone recognizing the moment, everyone waiting for the first pitch like it’s a drop in a song.
So yes, it’s a badass entrance. More importantly, it’s another sign that MLB teams are finally treating the ninth inning like the product moment it’s always been, one that looks and sounds like it matters.
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