Friday: remembered by the Miami Marlins. Saturday: Scored a one-two in his first major league game. Sunday: your first circuit.
Running carelessly from second to third base, Leblanc raised his fist briefly, as if it were his 100th.and long ball in the big leagues. A day at the office like any other.
“Because at the time, it was like a blackout for me. I saw the pitch, I hit, it was a home run, I went around the bases. At that time, I wasn’t thinking about anything, really,” he said. The pressMonday, 30 minutes before going to the stadium.
In a remote corner of the stands at LoanDepot Park in Miami, it was quite different.
some of your coaches high school had moved from Quebec. “They drove 26, 28 hours to go down to Miami and come see the game,” said the Laval resident.
Also on site, his girlfriend’s family. And him, of course. Sister, father, mother, grandmother.
In contrast to the player’s restraint, at the heights of the stadium, it was time for hugs. Leblanc didn’t think about it at the time, perhaps a little stunned, as he described it.
“But watching the videos afterwards, everyone who was happy for me was sick…”, he says.
An understandable reaction on their part. Charles Leblanc’s relatives had just witnessed, live, the culmination of more than two decades of sacrifices and efforts.
AAA dominant
If he seemed too zen around goals on Sunday, the Quebecois says he wasn’t at all 24 hours earlier, in his first game in the Marlins’ uniform.
“My stress level [samedi], out of 10, it was certainly 15! I could feel my heart pounding out of my chest, pounding in my throat until the fifth or sixth round,” he said.
In the eighth, the 26-year-old hit a double. Breaking the ice in his first game undoubtedly set the stage for the next day when he scored two goals before scoring.
This place in the big leagues, Leblanc didn’t steal it. With the Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp in the International League – which includes 20 of 30 AAA teams – third base hit .302 – fifth in the league – with 20 doubles, 14 home runs and 45 RBIs in 87 games.
And, perhaps most importantly, he showed consistency. Last year, with the Texas Rangers’ AAA lineup, he got off to a great start before sinking into very long lethargy at the plate. An experience that “brought him a lot”. He learned not to think too much. And to relativize.
After a good end to the calendar, he was claimed by the Miami Marlins in the “Rule 5 Draft” in December. A change of address he learned by consulting his Instagram account…
No matter where, Leblanc intended to build on the momentum gained in September to continue on the same path. What he achieved, he admits, undisguised satisfaction in his voice.
PHOTO SAM NAVARRO, USA TODAY SPORTS
Charles Leblanc slides home to score a run in the fifth inning on Sunday before hitting his home run.
“With the season I got to know in Jacksonville, I sure saw that coming a little bit, that reminder, admits the Laval resident. It may have happened late, we always want it to be faster. But with the negotiation deadline approaching, I knew there would be a lot of movement in the organization and I was one of those movements. I was happy. »
the shock of reality
A product of the University of Pittsburgh, Charles Leblanc was called up in the fourth round by the Texas Rangers in 2016. He has long been seen as a potential major league player.
The Quebecois, however, says he feels a “strange” feeling now that he is there. Admittedly, he got a taste of it with spring camps, but the real season is something, as a former hockey player would say. It’s not comparable.
“In training camp, there’s nobody in the stands and a lot of the big players are out, so you’re playing against other minor league players,” he explains.
“I still don’t seem to realize the fact that I’m not just here to be a replacement. I made the team. »
Undoubtedly. On Monday night, Charles Leblanc was back in the starting lineup. And he took another hit.
Read the story of Charles Leblanc
Read the story of his move from Rangers to Marlins
