The five silkiest, shiniest and most voluminous hair moments of the MLB season so far

Baseball players can crush baseballs distances we can barely fathom, throw baseballs at speeds that strain physics and, if you're Adam Rosales, sprint at the speed of light during home run trots.

There's one other reason to look up to them: Inspired moments of hair glory. So, if you're looking for something to show your hairdresser, here are five of the best hair moments from 2017.

5. Yulieski Gurriel's anti-gravity locks

There's gel, mousse and, for the punks in high school that needed to keep their mohawks perfectly coiffed, glue. None of them keep the hair looking as silky and shiny as Gurriel's.

Headbangers Ball. A post shared by MLB.com's Cut4 (@mlbcut4) on Apr 21, 2017 at 7:43pm PDT

The only possibility? Gurriel's hair can actually defy gravity. How he even manages to put a helmet or cap on is a mystery.

4. Jose Ramirez's hair reveal

If you remember the best part of last year's postseason, it was obviously Jose Ramirez's hair.

But come Spring Training, the nacho cheese-like neon locks were gone, and in their place, Ramirez wore a more traditional haircut. Would we have to sit through an entire season with a haircut that's ready for the corporate workplace?

Oh, thank heavens.

3. Bryce Harper's flippant attitude

Though the hair flip has always been a part of the human experience, Harper was the one to bring it to the baseball mainstream. Harper's hairflip is the Ken Griffey Jr. swing of hair-motions.

2. Puerto Rico turned a nation blonde

During Team Puerto Rico's endlessly exciting trip to the World Baseball Classic finals last month, there was one constant that seemed to power the team: Their beautiful, artificially blonde hair. Even Carlos Beltran's beard was unable to resist.

The move was so powerful, fans in Puerto Rico bought hair dye in droves to show their support. That's a hair movement.

1. Taylor Motter's follicle glory

There is hair, and then there is the golden silk that falls from Motter's head. It's a style that shouldn't exist in the real world, like Rapunzel's fabled locks or every look in "The Fifth Element," and yet, it does. We should be grateful.

Michael Clair writes about baseball for Cut4. He believes stirrup socks are an integral part of every formal outfit and Adam Dunn's pitching performance was baseball's greatest moment.