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Baseball Facilities                              Cougars in the Majors

 
Baseball

Charles Thomas, a 25-year-old former Asheville High Baseball Standout, recently joined the Atlanta Braves from Triple-A Richmond. Thomas is replacing outfielder Dewayne Wise, who has been placed o­n the disabled list with a sore elbow.Thomas' first hit in an MLB game came in the seventh inning o­n Thursday, June 24 in Miami.  It was his second major league at-bat. Thomas played baseball under head coach Gene Hammonds while a student at Asheville High. Check out Thomas' MLB Player Page: http://cbs.sportsline.com/mlb/players/playerpage/292196 or
http://atlanta.braves.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/team/player.jsp?player_id=433595


 

Former Catamount outfielder and Asheville native Charles Thomas was called up from Triple-A Richmond to the Atlanta Braves Wednesday afternoon. Thomas, who arrived at Miami late due to a delayed flight, pinch hit versus the Marlins, marking his first Major League appearance.

Thomas, a 25-year-old outfielder who was selected by the Braves in the 19th round of the 2000 draft, was called up after Dewayne Wise was placed o­n the disabled list. The International League leader with a .358 batting average, he will now be get the opportunity to start in left field in most games against right-handed starters. He was scratched from Wednesday's starting lineup because his flight into the Miami area landed approximately o­ne hour before the scheduled first pitch.

"He's basically a line-drive hitter and can run a little bit for you, too," said Braves second baseman Nick Green, who played with Thomas at Double-A Greenville and again at Triple-A Richmond for the first six weeks this year.

Thomas' four-hit performance this past Tuesday night for Richmond further improved the impressive stats he's accumulated after getting off to a slow start. Since May 1, he was hitting an impressive .382 (68-for-178). In addition to leading the International League in batting, Thomas paces the league in o­n-base percentage (.416) and is tied for seventh o­n the circuit in triples (4).

While he compiled a .238 batting average during his first two full minor league seasons (2001 and '02), these type of impressive offensive statistics didn't seem to be in Thomas' future. But since being promoted from Class A Myrtle Beach midway through last season, he's established himself as a consistent threat at the plate.

"From what I hear, he's a plugger," Atlanta Braves manager Bobby Cox said of Thomas. "He's a guy that's just gotten better, better and better."

While at Western (1998-2000), Thomas was a first team All-Southern Conference pick in 1999, leading the league with a .406 batting average that season. His 99 hits in 1999 ranks fourth o­n the WCU single-season list, three shy of the school's single season mark. In addition, he led the Catamounts in batting in 1998 (.364) and 2000 (.349), while pacing the Cats in hits (75), runs (44) and stolen bases (10) in 2000. In his three years at WCU, Thomas' .374 batting average ranks fifth all time, while adding 39 doubles, five triples, five home runs, 101 RBI and 38 stolen bases for his career.

Thomas is the second Asheville High Cougar (following Yankee pitcher Dave Cheadle) and the sixth WCU Catamount to reach the Major League, joining Jerry Reed (Philadelphia Phillies, Cleveland Indians, Seattle Mariners and Boston Red Sox; 1981-90), Wayne Tolleson (Texas Rangers, Chicago White Sox, New York Yankees; 1981-90), Paul Menhart (Toronto Blue Jays, Seattle Mariners and San Diego Padres; 1995-97), Jason Beverlin (Cleveland Indians and Detroit Tigers; 2002) and David Pember (Milwaukee Brewers; 2002).

Posted by Tarheel Cougar on Friday, June 25, 2004 (474 Reads)
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