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The most recent North Dakota baseball player to reach
the big leagues is Travis Hafner, who debuted with the Texas Rangers on
this date two years ago. He has since made quite a splash.
Like Darin Erstad, Hafner was born in Jamestown, but
Travis grew up in Sykeston, where he proved himself not only in baseball,
but basketball and track as well. In fact, he earned all-region honors
in basketball and finished 3rd in the state in discus and triple jump
during his senior year.
Hafners baseball career started with Little League,
then Babe Ruth and American Legion play, then a 2-year stint at Cowley
County Community College in Kansas. In 1996, he was selected by Texas
in the amateur draft, but he finished school first, earning Junior College
All-American honors. In the Junior College, or JUCO, World Series, he
hit a 3-run homer in a 4-2 win over Seminole Junior College to win the
championship and was voted MVP. He went on to sign with Texas in 1997
and debuted with the Rangers in 2002, playing first base.
Meanwhile, Cleveland was dealt a blow when they lost
super slugger, Jim Thome. After surveying their possibilities, they set
their sites on Hafner. They had to trade their starting catcher, Einar
Diaz, to Texas to get him.
Hafner had big shoes to fill, but hes a down-to-earth
guy with a levelheaded attitude. The media talked about it all the
time during spring training, he said, but for me it wasnt
a big deal. I knew I wasnt going to hit 50 home runs like Thome
did. I was trying to go out there and establish myself as a big league
player and do the things I was capable of.
Hafners teammates started calling him Donkey
and Project during spring training last year. Hafner asked
them, Why dont you guys just put them together and call me
Pronkey or Donkject? It was Pronkey
for a day, and then it was turned into Pronk. Sportscasters
now call him The Pronk.
The 2003 season had some disappointments for Hafner,
including an injury that kept him out of the game for a while. But, he
returned on July 12, and finished the season with 10 home runs and 29
RBIs in the final 60 games. His highlight came on August 14th at the Metrodome
in Minneapolis. During the 8th inning, he came to the plate needing a
triple to hit for the cycle thats getting a single, double,
triple and homerun all in the same game. He did it only the seventh
player in team history to do so.
I just hit the ball in the gap and was at second
before they picked the ball up, he said, so I knew Id
be able to make a triple out of it.
Fast forward to two and a half weeks ago, when Cleveland
won 7 games in an 8-game series with Anaheim. In the series opener, Hafner
hit 2 home runs and broke his personal record with five runs batted in.
The next night, he hit 3 more homers, and with six more runs batted in,
he not only broke his own record from the night before, he tied a team
record that has stood since 1930.
Hafner seemed a bit embarrassed by all the attention
he got after that game, saying, Hitting three home runs, I guess
its pretty special. It doesnt happen very often, especially
for me.
Sounds like it doesnt happen very often for anybody,
Pronk. Those five homeruns in two days tied a Major League record.
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