Kyler Fedko blasts three homers, posts 15 total bases in Saints loss
Kyler Fedko turned one night into a 15-total-base showcase, launching 429-, 437- and 397-foot homers in a game the Saints still lost 11-8.

For eight innings, Fifth Third Field belonged to Kyler Fedko. The St. Paul Saints outfielder crushed three home runs that traveled 429 feet, 437 feet and 397 feet, finishing 4-for-4 with 15 total bases, five RBIs and three runs scored in an 11-8 loss to the Toledo Mud Hens on April 12 in Toledo, Ohio.
Fedko’s damage came in the third, fourth and sixth innings, and every swing looked louder than the last. The first homer went 429 feet, the second cleared 437 feet, and the third still carried 397 feet. By the time the Saints had built an 8-4 lead, the night looked like a signature performance for one of the Twins system’s most interesting power-speed players.
Then came the ninth. Toledo scored seven times and erased the game, finishing the rally with Cal Stevenson’s walk-off grand slam. That collapse does not erase what Fedko did. The Saints and Minor League Baseball both treated the night as a historic one, and it was: Fedko’s three-homer burst was the first of his Triple-A career and one of the loudest offensive games St. Paul has had in recent memory.
The bigger question is whether this was a one-night eruption or another step in a real developmental climb. Fedko, a 26-year-old right-handed outfielder listed at 6-foot-0 and 215 pounds, has already shown he can impact a season with power and speed. Before this game, he had produced 50 minor league homers and 68 stolen bases in his career. After it, he sat at three homers on the 2026 season, with a .219 average through 32 at-bats, a line that still leaves room for more consistency.
That consistency is the piece that will determine how quickly the Twins push him up the call-up radar. Fedko broke out in 2025 with 28 homers and 38 steals across Double-A Wichita and Triple-A St. Paul, and he had already been named Twins Minor League Player of the Week during this hot streak. Earlier in the week, he tied a Saints franchise record with five hits in a game. Add that to three missiles in Toledo, and the argument is no longer about raw tools. It is about whether Minnesota has a legitimate upper-level bat forcing its way into the conversation.
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