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Sept. 1, 2008
Former YSU
Pitcher Justin Thomas Receives
Call-Up From Mariners
Youngstown
-- Former Youngstown State
pitcher and Horizon League Pitcher
of the Year Justin Thomas is finally
a Major Leaguer.
Thomas, a 2005 fourth-round draft pick by the Seattle Mariners, is
set to join the big-league club
for the first time today for its game against the Texas
Rangers.
A 6-foot-3 lefty from Toledo, Ohio, he began the season with
Double-A West Tennessee and went 2-1
with a 3.71 ERA in seven games at
Triple-A Tacoma. Six of his Triple-A
appearances have come since Aug. 18,
when he has allowed two earned runs
in 12 innings to earn his promotion.
YSU assistant coach Craig Antush, who worked with Thomas
daily during his tenure as a Penguin
from 2003-05, said he got goose
bumps when he heard the news.
"I was beyond excitement for him," Antush said. "He's such a
great kid to begin with, and he's a
fierce competitor every time he
pitches. The commitment that he's
shown is being rewarded today. This
just a great moment for him and a
great moment for YSU baseball to
have another pitcher in the big
leagues."
Thomas has pitched in both starting and relief roles in the
minors, but all of his most recent
appearances at Tacoma have come out
of the bullpen.
Thomas becomes the second former Penguin to be on a Major
League roster this season. Brad
Hennessey, a first-round draft
choice in 2001 by San Francisco,
pitched in 11 games earlier in the
year and was also called up today.
In his three years at YSU, Thomas won 19 games in leading the
Penguins to a string of successful
seasons. He helped YSU to 27 wins as
a freshman, and he was the staff ace
on the 2004 Horizon League
Championship squad and the 2005 team
that won 29 games.
His 250 strikeouts at YSU are second only to former Major
League All-Star Dave Dravecky's 251,
and he is the only pitcher in school
history to have at least seven wins
in back-to-back seasons.
As a junior, he was named the Horizon League Pitcher of the
Year after posting a 7-5 record with
a 3.42 ERA and a career-high 88
strikeouts. He was dominant in
League contests, posting a 3-1 mark
with a 2.00 ERA.
In his sophomore campaign, he
finished 7-3 and struck out 82
hitters in 93 1/3 innings to be
named Second-Team All-Horizon
League. He earned the win against
Butler in the first round of the
Horizon League Tournament and later
started against the No. 1 Texas
Longhorns in Youngstown State's
first-ever game in the Division I
NCAA Tournament.
He made his professional debut for the Everett Aquasox, the
class A affiliate of the Mariners,
on June 21, 2005, and appeared in 18
games that season. In 2006 he led
all Mariners minor leaguers with 14
wins and struck out 162 batters as
he ascended through the single-A
ranks.
In 2007 he spent the early part of the year on the disabled
list with a strained left elbow
before making 24 starts for West
Tennessee.
This season he went 7-7 with 106 strikeouts and a 4.32 ERA
for West Tennessee before his
promotion to Tacoma.
The Mariners, fresh off a three-game sweep of the Cleveland
Indians, open up a three-game series
with the Rangers at 8:05 p.m.
Eastern. |