Post by Fish Troll on Jun 5, 2008 23:15:51 GMT -5
ATLANTA (AP) -A threat to hit 400? Chipper Jones is already there.
The Atlanta Braves slugger cracked his 400th career home run Thursday night and finished with four hits in a 7-5 victory over the Florida Marlins , raising his major league-leading batting average to .418.
Jones came out of the dugout for what he said was only the second curtain call of his career as fans cheered his milestone homer in the sixth inning. He became the third switch-hitter to reach 400 home runs, following Hall of Famers Mickey Mantle (536) and Eddie Murray (504).
''To be lumped in with those guys is what I'm shooting for,'' Jones said. ''This is a step closer but still a long, long way from those guys. They set the bar really high.''
Brian McCann gave the Braves a 6-5 lead in the fifth with a two-run shot. Yunel Escobar also connected.
The three homers came off Ricky Nolasco (5-4), who gave up 12 hits and seven runs in 5 2-3 innings, ending his bid for his fifth straight win.
The 36-year-old Jones lifted his batting average from .409 to .418 by going 4-for-5 with singles in the first, third and eighth. He hit his 14th homer of the season about 10 rows deep into the right-field seats with two outs in the sixth.
''He never came up in a situation where we could pitch around him,'' said Marlins manager Fredi Gonzalez, a former Braves coach. ''He's sure not missing. He's locked in. I've never seen him this hot for this long.''
Jones paused to admire his homer before beginning his jog around the bases.
''I'm glad it wasn't a loss so I can enjoy it,'' he said. ''In no way do I want to show anybody up. ... It was a huge monkey off my back.''
As the video board replayed the shot, fans called Jones out of the dugout.
''That was my second curtain call here in Atlanta,'' he said, before reciting details of a three-run homer off New York Mets pitcher Al Leiter in 1999.
Only two curtain calls? Jones said that's fine with him.
''This is a town that's laid back and it fits my personality,'' he said.
Braves manager Bobby Cox said he has seen ''every single one'' of Jones' homers.
''He's quite the player,'' Cox said. ''He's one great player, four hits tonight and one was a homer, a stolen base and picked it at third again. He's just having a fabulous season. Gets better with age.''
The focus now will shift back to Jones' batting average.
The last time a major leaguer was hitting .418 or better through games of June 5 was in 1994, when Paul O'Neill of the New York Yankees had a .430 average on that date, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
The last major leaguer to hit .400 for a season was Boston's Ted Williams , who batted .406 in 1941.
The Atlanta Braves slugger cracked his 400th career home run Thursday night and finished with four hits in a 7-5 victory over the Florida Marlins , raising his major league-leading batting average to .418.
Jones came out of the dugout for what he said was only the second curtain call of his career as fans cheered his milestone homer in the sixth inning. He became the third switch-hitter to reach 400 home runs, following Hall of Famers Mickey Mantle (536) and Eddie Murray (504).
''To be lumped in with those guys is what I'm shooting for,'' Jones said. ''This is a step closer but still a long, long way from those guys. They set the bar really high.''
Brian McCann gave the Braves a 6-5 lead in the fifth with a two-run shot. Yunel Escobar also connected.
The three homers came off Ricky Nolasco (5-4), who gave up 12 hits and seven runs in 5 2-3 innings, ending his bid for his fifth straight win.
The 36-year-old Jones lifted his batting average from .409 to .418 by going 4-for-5 with singles in the first, third and eighth. He hit his 14th homer of the season about 10 rows deep into the right-field seats with two outs in the sixth.
''He never came up in a situation where we could pitch around him,'' said Marlins manager Fredi Gonzalez, a former Braves coach. ''He's sure not missing. He's locked in. I've never seen him this hot for this long.''
Jones paused to admire his homer before beginning his jog around the bases.
''I'm glad it wasn't a loss so I can enjoy it,'' he said. ''In no way do I want to show anybody up. ... It was a huge monkey off my back.''
As the video board replayed the shot, fans called Jones out of the dugout.
''That was my second curtain call here in Atlanta,'' he said, before reciting details of a three-run homer off New York Mets pitcher Al Leiter in 1999.
Only two curtain calls? Jones said that's fine with him.
''This is a town that's laid back and it fits my personality,'' he said.
Braves manager Bobby Cox said he has seen ''every single one'' of Jones' homers.
''He's quite the player,'' Cox said. ''He's one great player, four hits tonight and one was a homer, a stolen base and picked it at third again. He's just having a fabulous season. Gets better with age.''
The focus now will shift back to Jones' batting average.
The last time a major leaguer was hitting .418 or better through games of June 5 was in 1994, when Paul O'Neill of the New York Yankees had a .430 average on that date, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
The last major leaguer to hit .400 for a season was Boston's Ted Williams , who batted .406 in 1941.
sportsillustrated.cnn.com/baseball/mlb/gameflash/2008/06/05/19495_recap.html
Best 36 years old ever? Oh yeah the Marlins could see another milestone happen when Griffrey get his 600 on the 4 games series.