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October 13, 1960: Bill Mazeroski's
Homerun
"The exclusion of Mazeroski from
Cooperstown [he was enshrined in
2001] is a case of simple discrimination
against defensive skills." - George
Will (1995)
On October 13, 1960, Bill Mazeroski
became an instant hero when he became the first
player ever to end the World Series with a home
run. In one of the greatest games ever played, "the
Maz" hit a fastball off Yankee pitcher Ralph Terry
over Yogi Berra's head in left field, giving the
Pirates a 10-9 victory and their first World
Championship in 35 years.
It still remains as one of the most
shocking moments in sports history and many
middle-aged Yankee fans are still trying to forget
that day. Bob Costas said, "As an 8-year-old Yankee
fan in 1960, I literally wept when Bill Mazeroski's
home run cleared the ivy-covered wall of Forbes
Field. Thirty-five years later, I believe I have
come to terms with it, and can see Bill Mazeroski
for what he really was: one of baseball's all-time
great second basemen."
Not only was Mazeroski the greatest
second baseman in Pirate history, he was also very
likely the best defensive second basemen of all
time. Yet he achieved instant fame offensively with
one swing of the bat. He had already made his mark
in the Series against the Yankees with a two-run
homer in the opener, but no one could have
predicted his Game 7 winner.
As a whole, the '60 series will
always be remembered as one of the most exciting,
as both teams played to a 3-3 standoff. The Pirates
and Yankees pitching staffs were solid on the mound
and both were backed up by strong performances at
the plate. There were some overall differences in
playing styles. The Yankees played more
aggressively while the Pirates relied on finesse,
but many feel that this represented one of the best
match-ups of the 1960's.
The Pirates won the opener, 6-4, at
Forbes Field, but the Yankees answered in Games 2
and 3. New York, led by Mickey Mantle's two home
runs and five runs-batted-in, knocked six Pirate
pitchers for 19 hits and rolled to a 16-3 victory
in the second game. As the Series shifted to Yankee
Stadium, Bobby Richardson stepped up to the plate
and delivered. Having driven in only seven runs in
the last 75 games of the AL season and just 26
overall, the second baseman connected for a
bases-loaded home run off reliever Clem Labine in
the first inning of Game 3. He later contributed a
two-run single, giving him a Series-record six
RBIs. Yankee powerhouse Mickey Mantle continued to
shine with a two-run homer and three other hits.
New York was a 10-0 winner, with Whitey Ford
pitching a four-hitter.
Down, but not out, the Pirates gave
the ball to first-game winner Vern Law in Game 4.
Law, a 20-game winner in '60 and the NL's Cy Young
Award winner, combined with relief ace Roy Face to
beat back the Yankees, 3-2. Art Ditmar, the Game 1
starter for the Yankees, received another chance in
Game 5. Bill Mazeroski's double was the key hit in
the Pirates' three-run second inning. The smash
scored two runs and drove Ditmar off the mound. Roy
Face returned with 2 2/3 innings of hitless relief
after replacing starter Harvey Haddix to nail down
the 5-2 triumph. This moved the "Buccos" ahead in
the Series.
Surprised by their opponents'
tenacity, the Yankees called on a proven
combination in Game 6; big bats and the pitching of
ace Whitey Ford. The "Bronx Bombers" did their part
at the plate with an unbelievable 17-hit spree and
Ford again shut out the Pirates, this time holding
the NL champions to a meager seven hits. Hoping to
clinch their first Series championship in 3 1/2
decades, the Pirates instead wound up 12-0 losers
in their own backyard.
While the first six games of the
1960 Series had been statistically notable (the
Yankees' victories, for instance, came by the
combined score of 38-3), Game 7 would erase those
numbers and leave fans in both agony and ecstasy.
Vern Law and the rest of the Pirates showed why
they were still there, by rolling over New York to
take an early 4-0 lead. However, the Yankees came
back with key performances at the plate by Skowron,
Mantle and Berra and shot to a 5-4 lead going into
the eighth inning. They continued to lead 7-5 and
appeared to be in great shape, as reliever Bobby
Shantz appeared at the top of his game. Fortunately
for the Pirates, appearances can be deceiving.
Gino Cimoli led off the Pittsburgh
eighth inning with a pinch single and Bill Virdon
hit a sharp grounder toward Yankee shortstop, Tony
Kubek. The ball took a bad hop and struck Kubek in
the throat resulting in a single. The injury proved
serious and he was taken out of the game. Joe
DeMaestri was summoned to replace him, as both
Pirates remained on base. Dick Groat followed with
another single and cut the lead to 7-5. Roberto
Clemente kept the rally alive with an infield hit
that scored Virdon and advanced Groat to third. Now
trailing 7-6, Pittsburgh had two runners on base
and Hal Smith at the plate. Smith, who entered the
game in the top of the eighth inning after Pirate
catcher Smoky Burgess left for a pinch-runner in
the previous inning, sent shock waves through the
Pittsburgh crowd by blasting a home run over the
left field wall.
Bob Friend, an 18-game winner for
the Pirates and the Bucs' starter in Games 2 and 6,
came on in the ninth inning to try to protect the
9-7 lead. The Yankees' Bobby Richardson and
pinch-hitter Dale Long both greeted Friend with
singles and Pirates manager, Danny Murtaugh was
forced to lift the veteran pitcher in favor of
Harvey Haddix. Although he forced Roger Maris to
foul out, Haddix gave up a key single to Mickey
Mantle that scored Richardson and moved Long to
third base. Yogi Berra followed with a strong
grounder to first, with Rocky Nelson stepping on
the base for the second out. In what, at the time,
stood as a monumental play, Mantle, seeing he had
no chance to beat a play at second, scurried back
to first and avoided Nelson's tag (which would have
been the third out) as McDougald raced home to tie
the score, 9-9.
Ralph Terry, who had gotten the
final out in the Pirates' eighth inning, returned
to the mound in the bottom of the ninth. The first
man he faced was Bill Mazeroski. With a count of
one ball and no strikes, the Pirates' second
baseman smashed a drive over the wall in left
field, ending the contest and crowning the National
League as champions. As the Pirates erupted in a
wild celebration, the Yankees stood in disbelief,
knowing that they had clearly dominated the Series,
but were unable to finish the job. The improbable
champions were outscored, 55-27, and outhit, 91-60,
but in the end, Pittsburgh prevailed. Years later,
Mickey Mantle was quoted as saying that losing the
1960 series was the biggest disappointment of his
career. For Mazeroski, it was the highlight. Both
men (and many others from this game) would be
joined together in the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown.
Some would remember the '60 series with fondness
and others with regret.
Someone once said, "It's not always
the better team who wins." And even the mighty
Yankees can fall to an opponent who is able to
seize the moment. The Pittsburgh Pirates and Bill
Mazeroski were able to do that in Game 7 and proved
that "carpe diem" does exist. I think Yankee
pitcher Ralph Terry summed it up perfectly when he
said, "I don't know what that pitch to Mazeroski
was. All I know is that it was the wrong
one."
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