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Homer No. 500 and an ejection

Toronto's Thomas hits milestone home run, later gets tossed for arguing call

The Associated Press

Published: Fri, Jun. 29, 2007 12:00AM

Modified Fri, Jun. 29, 2007 03:44AM

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MINNEAPOLIS -- Some good news for Frank Thomas was that his family had to catch an early flight Thursday.

That meant his wife, three children and father-in-law got to see Thomas hit his 500th home run. And they were gone when Thomas got ejected.

"They had to leave for the airport at 1:45. My daughter said, 'Dad, you've got to do it in the first couple of at-bats,' " he said.

FRANK THOMAS' MILESTONE HOME RUNS

1 -- Aug. 28, 1990, at Minnesota Twins (off pitcher Gary Wayne)

100 -- Aug. 31, 1993, at New York Yankees (Sterling Hitchcock)

200 -- June 9, 1996, at Baltimore Orioles (Jimmy Haynes)

300 -- Aug. 7, 1999, at Oakland Athletics (Kevin Appier)

400 -- July 25, 2003, vs. Tampa Bay Devil Rays (Jorge Sosa)

500 -- June 28, 2007, at Minnesota Twins (Carlos Silva)

Thomas hit a three-run shot in the first inning of the Toronto Blue Jays' 8-5 loss to the Minnesota Twins, becoming the 21st major leaguer to reach 500.

But in the ninth, Thomas was ejected by plate umpire Mark Wegner after being called out on strikes for the second time in the game. Manager John Gibbons came out to argue and also got tossed.

"I'm probably the first to get 500 home runs and get thrown out of the ballgame," Thomas, 39, said. "That's something I didn't want to happen, but the moment just got the best of me."

Thomas also had an RBI double and tied his season high with four RBIs.

Torii Hunter homered twice and Jason Bartlett also connected for Minnesota, which rallied from a 5-1 deficit.

"You can't upstage 500 home runs. It's hard to do. I'll be lucky if I hit 300," said Hunter, who has 181 career homers.

Carlos Silva (6-8), who gave up Thomas' milestone homer, was the winner, and Joe Nathan finished for his 15th save. Jason Frasor (1-3) took the loss.

Thomas came up after Matt Stairs' RBI single in the first and sent Silva's 1-2 pitch about 396 feet into the left-field stands.

Todd Eisenlohr, sitting in the fifth row and wearing a jersey of Twins player Jason Bartlett, caught the ball in his glove.

"I lost it in the roof as it was coming down," Eisenlohr said.

He said he traded the souvenir ball for an autographed ball, bat and jersey.

Thomas said he plans to keep the ball unless it is wanted by the Hall of Fame.

Before the at-bat, Thomas looked at the scoreboard and saw that his average with runners in scoring position was .182.

"I said, 'Let's just get a hit right here.' That's when home runs happen, when you're really not trying to do too much. He hung a slider over the corner, and I stayed with the pitch," he said.

The Metrodome crowd responded with a standing ovation for the two-time American League MVP.

Thomas hit his first career home run at the Metrodome against Gary Wayne while with the Chicago White Sox on Aug. 28, 1990. He has 16 homers overall at the stadium and 50 against the Twins, his most against any team and the most by an active player against Minnesota.

Next on Thomas' ascent on the career home run list are Eddie Murray (504), Mel Ott (511) and Ernie Banks and Eddie Mathews (512 each).

Also within reach of 500 this year are Alex Rodriguez, Jim Thome and Manny Ramirez.

Thomas shook his head in amazement when he thought about joining the likes of Hank Aaron, Barry Bonds, Babe Ruth, Willie Mays and Harmon Killebrew in the 500 club.

"It's an unbelievable class of talent. I saw a lot of them play. I have the utmost respect, and I'm very happy to be here because it takes a long time to hit 500 home runs and I think I've paid my dues long enough through numerous injuries," he said.

"At one point, I didn't think I'd ever get here because of the ankle. I'd never be back on the field." he said.

The left ankle limited Thomas to 108 combined games in 2004 and 2005, leading to his exit from Chicago, where he played the first 16 years of his career.

Thomas is in his first season with Toronto. He played last season with the Oakland Athletics.

"Now that I'm healthy again I would love to get to 600. It'll take a lot of luck to get there, but I really got to have a strong second half and really prove that I can still play this game," he said.

He doesn't care that his milestone came in an era skepticism surrounds some of the game's most prolific home run hitters.

"This means a lot to me because I did it the right way and I've busted my butt since college," he said. "I always worked hard in that weight room to be strong. I'm a big guy, and I've been blessed with this talent."

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