Former Brave Hessman Sets IL Home Run Record

rico43

<B>Director of Minor League Reports</B>
From MiLB.

Along with the smell of champagne and some Gatorade stains on his jersey, what Mike Hessman seemed to take away most from Monday night was a sense of relief.

Exactly one month after tying the International League career home run record, Hessman homered in the third inning of Triple-A Toledo's 9-1 win over Indianapolis on Monday night. The round-tripper was the 259th for Hessman in the IL, surpassing long-time Buffalo outfielder Ollie Carnegie for the most in league history.

"It obviously feels good to get it out of the way," Hessman said. "I'd been sitting on it for a while, with injuries and stuff, just trying to get back on the field. … It's one of those things where I'm finally glad it's over with."

Hessman jolted the record-breaker on a 2-0 offering from Indianapolis right-hander Jake Brigham. The right-handed hitter drove the ball over the wall in left-center field.

"Jake, I have a lot of respect for him," Hessman said. "My first at-bat, he threw some sinkers in, so I knew he would probably go back in there. When I got ahead, he threw more of a four-seam fastball without much movement. I was lucky enough to get a pitch over the plate, and it was something I could put a good swing on."

Indianapolis alerted the crowd to the history it had just seen, and Hessman's trot around the bases was accompanied by a growing ovation. Teammates lined up outside the dugout to greet him after the blast. During an on-field postgame interview, they showered the slugger with champagne and Gatorade.

"It was awesome," Hessman said. "After I hit it, the whole team came out there outside the dugout to congratulate me, high-fives and hugs all around.

"It's been good, been fun the whole process of going after it. It was nice to see my teammates celebrating and have a good time with it."

The homer was Hessman's first extra-base hit since tying Carnegie on May 30 with a solo homer against Charlotte. The 36-year-old missed time having a pre-cancerous growth removed from his face and also a lingering wrist injury, but went 13 games without a long ball since matching the record.

"I was kind of banged up and went through a few injuries," Hessman said. "The longer it took, it was just one of those things where I was trying to get healthy and back on the field, get out to play and finally I got it done."

Earlier this year, Hessman became the seventh Minor Leaguer to club 400 homers. He's the leader among active players with 404 long balls.

Carnegie, the man he surpassed Monday, clubbed 258 IL homers between 1931 -- he was 32 years old when he started his run -- and 1945, all with Buffalo.

Hessman said he has both his 400th home run ball and now the IL record-breaker after the Indianapolis staff tracked down the souvenir from the fan who caught it. The first baseman said he traded a signed bat and ball for No. 259.

Hessman was a 15th-round Draft pick by the Braves in 1996 out of Mater Dei High School in California. He played in Atlanta through the 2004 season, belting his first 61 IL homers over three seasons with Triple-A Richmond.

From 2005-'09, he hit 140 home runs with Toledo. He added 18 homers in 64 games with Buffalo in 2010 before spending 2011 in Japan. He returned to the United States with Oklahoma City of the Pacific Coast League in 2012, then came back to the IL with Louisville in '13, bopping 25 homers.

He returned to the Mud Hens this season and has 15 homers in 64 games with the Tigers affiliate, giving him 156 homers with the team.

Next on Hessman's milestone checklist would be a move into sixth all-time on the Minor League home run list. He currently trails Nick Cullop, who had 420 homers between 1920 and 1944.

For now, the slugger is happy to be healthy and have a little time to enjoy playing ball between chasing checkpoints for his historic career.

"Honestly, I haven't put a lot of thought into it," Hessman said. "My thoughts are just trying to stay healthy and stay on the field to compete and try to give my team a chance to win.

"I think once my playing days are over, or once the year is over with, maybe I can take a step back a little bit and look at it in a different perspective and see what was really going on, but like I said, I'm just enjoying the process and enjoying going out and playing the game."
 
I haven't been following that closely. Plus, I don't drink. Figured he'd set the record.

Whenever I see Mike Olt's stat line, I always wonder how he has been so hyped and the Cubs keep trotting him out there.
 
I keep wondering how much of an honor it is, really, to lead the IL in HR's. It means you were a 4A player your entire career. And all those guys he's catching were from an era when the AAA leagues were *much* better than they are today, being that there were only 400 major leaguers on the planet back then.
 
I keep wondering how much of an honor it is, really, to lead the IL in HR's. It means you were a 4A player your entire career. And all those guys he's catching were from an era when the AAA leagues were *much* better than they are today, being that there were only 400 major leaguers on the planet back then.

It sounds as though he felt quite honored, but even if not, it's a helluva living, being paid to play baseball for 16-odd years. His salary is in excess of $200 K per year, and he does have some MLB service time as well.
 
I keep wondering how much of an honor it is, really, to lead the IL in HR's. It means you were a 4A player your entire career. And all those guys he's catching were from an era when the AAA leagues were *much* better than they are today, being that there were only 400 major leaguers on the planet back then.

Well, it's 259 more IL homers than either you or I have hit, so I don't know about you, but I think it's a pretty decent feat. He'd have broken it earlier if he wouldn't have wasted that year in Japan.

I don't think the AAA leagues are worse now than they were in previous years. If anything, the leagues are more experienced than they were in a previous generation because big league clubs want battle-tested guys that they can slot in at the end of the bench or the back end of the rotation or bullpen at the ready in AAA. Further, guys stick around longer than they did a generation ago because the pay is a lot better than it was back then. There are less top prospects who spend a ton of time in AAA anymore because in my estimation, it's no longer a learning league for the most part.
 
I keep wondering how much of an honor it is, really, to lead the IL in HR's. It means you were a 4A player your entire career. And all those guys he's catching were from an era when the AAA leagues were *much* better than they are today, being that there were only 400 major leaguers on the planet back then.

You've got to be kidding me... get back on your couch... you'd think you were the sh*t if you were able to achieve that.
 
I say Uggla be sent to the IL to try for the record.

God, Hessman has been around forever. I have one of his cracked bats from his Macon Braves days.
 
I was a bit harsh, but my point is if he had a choice of getting the IL HR record, or having 80 HR's playing in the majors as a part time 1B, DH and bench bat, I think he would take the latter.
 
I was a bit harsh, but my point is if he had a choice of getting the IL HR record, or having 80 HR's playing in the majors as a part time 1B, DH and bench bat, I think he would take the latter.

Well, sure. But think about how tough it is to get a job playing baseball at all. And then to keep it for, what, 16 years?
 
I was a bit harsh, but my point is if he had a choice of getting the IL HR record, or having 80 HR's playing in the majors as a part time 1B, DH and bench bat, I think he would take the latter.

Of course he would, but that shouldn't diminish what he's done here.

For some reason, Hessman never got an extended chance to succeed or fail in the majors. Like a lot of AAAA guys, he needs to play every day to be productive at the big league level and he's not quite good enough to play every day. If his walk rate had been higher as a younger player, he may have gotten a more extended look as a big league player. His walk rate still isn't that high, but he was pretty much a two-outcome player early in his career. Monster power though.

The other thing is that I still think the Braves rushed him. He leapfrogged the Appy League after his initial season in the GCL and I could never figure that out. After that, he kind of slogged his way upward.
 
I haven't been following that closely. Plus, I don't drink. Figured he'd set the record.

Whenever I see Mike Olt's stat line, I always wonder how he has been so hyped and the Cubs keep trotting him out there.
I didn't say bottles of booze. A man your age I figured you'd be popping something else when excited. :Alone:
 
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