How many pitches?? Thomas makes history with well-earned homer
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LOS ANGELES -- There¡¯s battling with two strikes. And then there¡¯s what D-backs center fielder Alek Thomas did in Game 1 of the National League Division Series on Saturday night.
In the top of the seventh inning of the D-backs¡¯ 11-2 rout of the Dodgers, Thomas fell behind right-hander Michael Grove, 1-2. That was only the beginning of one of the feistiest at-bats in postseason history.
Remarkably, Thomas would foul off the next 10 pitches. After he watched a curveball in the dirt for ball two, Thomas finally forced Grove into a mistake on the 14th pitch of the at-bat -- a belt-high 2-2 slider. Thomas turned on the offering, walloping a no-doubter into the right-field pavilion at Dodger Stadium, giving the D-backs a 10-0 lead and sending fans to the exits.
¡°Man, that was a really cool at-bat,¡± Thomas said afterward. ¡°Probably the longest at-bat ever of my life. So it was pretty sweet to end it on a homer.¡±
In the process, he made a bit of postseason history. At 14 pitches, Thomas¡¯ at-bat was the longest at-bat to end with a postseason home run since pitch counts have been tracked (beginning in 1988). Jayson Werth¡¯s walk-off homer against then-Cardinal and current Dodger Lance Lynn in the 2012 NLDS came on the 13th pitch.
¡°It was a long at-bat,¡± Thomas said. ¡°I don¡¯t know, I just kept fouling them off. Probably about half of those pitches weren¡¯t strikes. But it¡¯s just part of the game. You¡¯ve got to battle. Thankfully, the last pitch was the one that I could hit.¡±
And he hit it a long, long way, too. Thomas¡¯ 427-foot blast was the longest of the D-backs¡¯ four home runs against Dodgers pitching on Saturday night.