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Cardinals prospect makes history, hits for 'home run cycle'

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St. Louis Cardinals prospect Chandler Redmond etched his name into baseball history on Wednesday.

Redmond hit a solo home run, two-run home run, three-run home run, and a grand slam all in the same game, completing the rarest achievement in baseball history: the "home run cycle".

"It’s unbelievable," Redmond said via mlb.com. "I don’t know even know what words to use to describe the feelings right now

It was only the second time in modern baseball history that the feat has been accomplished. The last person to do it was Tyrone Horne on July 27, 1998, for the then-Cardinals affiliate Double-A Arkansas Travelers of the Texas League.

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The "home run cycle" has never happened in the major leagues. There have been more perfect games in MLB history (23) than games where a player hits four home runs in the same game (15).

The most recent player to hit home four home runs in a game was J.D. Martinez with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2017 against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

J.D. Martinez, #28 of the Arizona Diamondbacks, at-bat during Game Two of the National League Division Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on October 7, 2017 in Los Angeles.  (Photo by Sarah Sachs/Arizona Diamondbacks/Getty Images)

Redmond did not hit his first home run of the game until the fifth inning. Redmond's first home run was an opposite field two-run home run that gave the Springfield Cardinals a 6-4 lead.

The lefty went back up to the plate in the sixth inning and sent a 3-1 change-up the opposite way for a grand slam for his second home run of the day to put the Cardinals up 11-4.

DODGERS EXTEND WINNING

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