Carson Kelly becomes the 1st Chicago Cubs player to hit for cycle since Mark Grace in 1993

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Carson Kelly had found himself in this situation before and bluntly assessed his reality when he stepped to the plate in the eighth inning Monday night at Sutter Health Park.

The Chicago Cubs catcher needed a triple for the cycle, having hit just two in 1,814 big-league plate appearances. Plus, those three baggers required help, Kelly recalled, from the outfielder falling down both times in pursuit of the baseball.

“Odds are not in my favor, right?” Kelly wryly noted.

The 30-year-old was a triple short of the cycle last year with the Texas Rangers just three days before the season ended, but grounded out in the ninth. This time, Kelly focused on just putting together a good at-bat — and he got a pitch to drive. Kelly sent Athletics left-hander T.J. McFarland’s full-count elevated sinker off the right-center field wall, which then rocketed past center fielder JJ Bleday.

Kelly knew by the time he touched first base that a triple – and the cycle – was in play. By the time Bleday got to the ball and threw it back, Kelly was already rounding second base to reach third without a throw. It served as the exclamation point during the Cubs’ 18-3 stomping of the A’s in the first major-league game played in West Sacramento.

“I saw the ricochet, and I was like, ‘Oh boy, this is it right here, I gotta go,’” Kelly said. “It’s probably the fastest you’ll ever see me run.”

Kelly became the first Cub to hit for the cycle since Mark Grace on May 9, 1993, ending the longest cycle drought by a National League team. Cubs hitters had combined for 342 near-cycles, falling one required hit short, before Kelly’s. Only the Kansas City Royals (George Brett in 1990) had gone longer without one. Grace’s feat occurred more than a year before Kelly was born. Kelly got to know Grace, a Diamondbacks TV analyst, during his five seasons playing for Arizona.

A Cubs player hitting for the cycle has been more difficult to pull off than an individual no-hitter, with only 12 such games compared to 15 no-no’s for the franchise.

“That’s pretty special, a great accomplishment, something that I never thought I would get,” Kelly said. “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.”

Kelly’s four-hit, five-RBI performance was part of an offensive explosion that featured 18 runs, 21 hits, including 11 for extra bases, and 10 walks. Seven players — Kyle Tucker, Seiya Suzuki, Michael Busch, Dansby Swanson, Nico Hoerner, Pete Crow-Armstrong and Kelly — finished with multi-hit games.

Right-hander Ben Brown took advantage of the Cubs’ four-run first and largely kept the A’s in check over five innings, holding them to three runs. Colin Rea kept the bullpen rested and earned the save for tossing three shutout innings.

Kelly’s feat was notable beyond recording the first Cubs cycle in nearly 32 years:

  • He became the third player in MLB history to hit for the cycle and record two walks in a game, joining the New York Yankees’ Joe Gordon (Sept. 8, 1940) and the Philadelphia Athletics’ Mickey Cochrane (Aug. 2, 1933).
  • Kelly is the first Cubs catcher to hit for the cycle since Randy Hundley on Aug. 11, 1966, vs. Houston.
  • He did it in the No. 9 spot of the batting order, something that hadn’t been pulled off in the majors in almost 20 years (Chone Figgins, Sept. 16, 2006).
  • Had Kelly hit the ball that went for a triple at Great American Ball Park, Progressive Field, Angel Stadium or Dodger Stadium, it would have been a home run in those ballparks, according to ...
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