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Cubs catcher Carson Kelly makes history on special day in Sacramento

11 months agoAndy Martinez

Cubs catcher Carson Kelly tried to push any thought of history out of his mind.

The 30-year-old was a triple shy of the cycle – almost an oxymoron of a statement given the difficulty of scampering across the bases to collect three bases. No Cub had achieved the feat since Mark Grace on May 9, 1993 – before Kelly was born. Couple that with the fact that Kelly had two career triples and rewriting history seemed like a longshot.

[Cubs Takeaways: What we learned in blowout of Athletics in MLB debut in West Sacramento]

“I’m like, ‘It’s not in my favor here. I gotta run a triple here?’” Kelly told reporters in West Sacramento, Calif. after the Cubs’ 18-3 rout of the Athletics. “The two times I hit triples, both guys like fell down, like, ran into the wall and fell down.

“It’s hard. The odds are not in your favor on that one.”

Instead, Kelly had a simple mindset as he stepped into the batter’s box in the eighth inning at Sutter Health Park.

“This time, I’m like, ‘Oh, I’m just gonna put a good at-bat together,’” Kelly said.

He did that. The backstop worked a 3-2 count and then crushed a 104.8-mph liner to right-center field. The ball caromed off the wall and bounced.

“I saw it ricochet, and I was like, ‘Oh boy, this is it right here. I gotta go,’” Kelly said.

Kelly kicked into overdrive – a 16-3 lead be damned – and had one goal: reach third base.

“I didn’t realize he had a chance at a cycle,” his manager Craig Counsell told reporters after the game. “But when that ball kicked off the wall, the dugout started going crazy, so I figured something was going on.”

Kelly darted around second, reached third without a throw and celebrated the hit as if it were a go-ahead triple in a one-run game.

“I know Mark Grace, too, in Arizona, yeah,” Kelly – who spent five seasons with the Diamondbacks said. “I’ll have to hit him up. I mean, pretty special. Great accomplishment, something that I never thought I would get.

“I’m just very fortunate and blessed and a lot of hard work, a lot of great teammates pumping me up. All in all, just a very special night.”

Tuesday was always going to be one for the history books. The A’s were playing their first game in West Sacramento – they’ll play there for three seasons before moving to Las Vegas – and had a sellout crowd of 12,192 at the Triple-A home of the Sacramento RiverCats.

But Kelly made the day historic for more than one reason.

“They’re fun days, man,” Counsell said. “They’re rare days and they’re once-in-a-lifetime type days for players.”