Thomas smacks three homers for Redbirds
One day after the one-year anniversary of the last three-homer game for Triple-A Memphis, Lane Thomas reset the record book.The Cardinals' No. 9 prospect blasted a trio of big flies for his first career three-homer game, powering the Redbirds to a 9-4 triumph over Oklahoma City on Saturday night at
One day after the one-year anniversary of the last three-homer game for Triple-A Memphis,
The Cardinals' No. 9 prospect blasted a trio of big flies for his first career three-homer game, powering the Redbirds to a 9-4 triumph over Oklahoma City on Saturday night at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark. He drove in four runs and has four homers over the last two nights.
"It honestly didn't even cross my mind until I did it," he said with a laugh. "You get caught up in the at-bat and situation and what pitches you're looking for. It just comes with playing the game."
Thomas parked his first round-tripper of the night in the fourth inning after falling into an 0-2 hole against starter and Dodgers No. 11 prospect
The 23-year-old capped a four-run fifth with a two-run blast off Santana. This time, he needed to see just one pitch from the right-hander before sending the ball to straightaway center field.
The Redbirds had an 8-4 cushion when Thomas strode to the plate in the seventh, but the hat trick didn't come without some suspense. Left-handed reliever
Gameday box score
"I knew once I hit it that I hit it out. I got it pretty good," Thomas said. "But going into that at-bat, I wasn't trying to hit a third home run. I was just trying to put together a good at-bat."
In Friday's 13-10 slugfest, Cardinals No. 12 prospect
Thomas is the first Redbird to hit three homers in a game since
Drafted by the Blue Jays in 2014, Thomas was traded to St. Louis for cash considerations in the middle of the 2017 season. In his second PCL stint, he's hitting .270/.350/.464 with 10 homers and an .840 OPS. He made his big league debut on April 18 as a defensive replacement and homered in first Major League at-bat two days later. Since then, he's shuffled to and from the parent club, going 4-for-11 (.308) and driving in four runs in four separate stints.
"It's been tough to stay in a groove, but since I came down from the big leagues right before the All-Star break, I've just worked on some things," Thomas admitted. "Our hitting coach [Jobel Jimenez] is awesome. He understands the variables that can happen.
"It's tough probably for some people, but for me it's just understanding my role for right now. I'm not going to get upset over things I can't control. It's understanding your role and doing what you have to do to get back [to the Majors]. That's always been my focus -- I can't control what decisions are made, but I can control what's going on with me that day."
Cardinals No. 16 prospect
For Oklahoma City, Dodgers No. 19 prospect
Katie Woo is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow her on Twitter <a href="twitter.com/katiejwoo>@katiejwoo.