Tulsa evens TL Finals on Downs' trifecta
Jeter Downs set the tone for the Double-A Drillers with a milestone night. The sixth-ranked Dodgers prospect smacked three solo homers, reached base six times and scored five runs as Tulsa outslugged Amarillo, 18-9, in Game 2 of the Texas League Championship Series at Hodgetown. Donovan Casey added two dingers,
The sixth-ranked Dodgers prospect smacked three solo homers, reached base six times and scored five runs as Tulsa outslugged Amarillo, 18-9, in Game 2 of the Texas League Championship Series at Hodgetown.
On the first pitch of the game by Padres No. 28 prospect
"We kind of jumbled the lineup a little bit and wanted some power up top and Jeter hits the first pitch of the game out," he said. "After a loss, to jump out on top was good ... and we ended up scoring three runs."
Downs agreed with his coach.
"It was an amazing feeling, first pitch of the game, in a big bounce game for us after the Game 1 loss," the 21-year-old shortstop said. "Good way to start off and set the tone that we're here to fight. Got the guys amped up a bit."
Downs drew a two-out walk in the third, scoring on a double by Los Angeles' No. 28 prospect
A throwing error by shortstop
Downs rounded the bases again in the fifth, crushing the first pitch he saw from
He wasn't done yet, planting a 2-0 pitch from 6-foot-5 righty
After his Aug. 20 promotion to the Texas League, Downs batted .333/.429/.688 with five home runs, two doubles, 14 runs scored, 11 RBIs and a stolen base in 12 games. With Class A Advanced Rancho Cucamonga, the right-handed hitter finished with a .269 average, 19 dingers, four triples, 33 doubles, 78 runs, 75 RBIs and 23 stolen bases over 107 contests.
"It is a special bat," Hennessey said. "He has a lot of power and continues to grow as a hitter. He knows who he is as a hitter, which is very unique for how young he is. He knows who he is as a player and never tries to do too much at the plate."
Wong contributed four hits -- including three doubles -- four runs and two RBIs and four runs while Los Angeles' No. 15 prospect
All the offense helped counteract losing the lead in the first. Trailing 5-3, Hennessey brought in
"We hit them in the mouth and then they hit back," the manager said. "We brought Vasquez in, one of our back-end guys, just to slow the game down which we normally don't like to do, but we did. I basically said, 'Let's get a couple of runs. Scratch a couple out and give ourselves a puncher's chance.' I didn't think eight runs was enough the way the ballpark was playing. We kept on grinding out at-bats, not trying to hit home runs. Just a credit to our guys hanging with it."
"Punching back after they put up an eight-spot was huge," Downs added. "Felt like that killed the crowd and drained them a bit. That's a great squad over there. They aren't gonna give up, but it was definitely a good blow to get them right back, killing their momentum."
Left-hander
That impressed Hennessey, particularly since the wind was blowing out at times at 20 mph.
"It started with Vasquez," he said. "That's why we brought him in there. He settled the game down. Then Michael Boyle was outstanding. They were getting ahead of hitters, keeping the ball down."
Ultimately the Drillers got what they were looking for, one win in two games on the road before returning to their friendly confines for the rest of the Finals. Game 3 will be played Friday.
"Obviously, we wanted to get a split just like in the Arkansas series," the skipper said. "So we've been here before and the guys were as loose as I've ever seen them today in batting practice, talking smack to each other, and we came out and just played like it."
Trammell also tripled and scored twice for Amarillo.
Brian Stultz is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow him on Twitter @brianjstultz.