The
Shot Heard ‘Round the World
By
Harvey Frommer
Throughout
the long history of baseball there have been poignant, exciting,
dramatic
moments. But very few can compare to what happened on October 3, 1951
at the
old Polo Grounds in New York City.
Some
refer to that time as "The Miracle at Coogan's Bluff." Others,
especially in Brooklyn, call it "Dat Day." But no matter what label
is applied it was a time to remember.
It
was a time when the Giants played out of the Polo Grounds in Manhattan
and the
Dodgers entertained millions in their tiny Brooklyn ballpark, Ebbets
Field. It
was a time of tremendous fan devotion to each team.
In
July Brooklyn manager Charlie Dressen had bragged, "The Giants is
dead." It seemed to aptly describe the plight of Leo Durocher's team.
For
on August 12 the Giants trailed the Dodgers by 13 l/2 games in the
standings.
Then,
incredibly, the Giants locked into what has been called "The Miracle
Run." They won 37 of their final 44 games - 16 of them in one frenetic
stretch - and closed the gap.
"It
was a once-in-a-lifetime situation," recalls Monte Irvin, who batted
.312
that year for the Giants. "We kept on winning. The Dodgers kept on
losing.
It seemed like we beat everybody in the seventh, eighth and ninth
inning.
The
Giants and Dodgers finished the season in a flat-footed tie for
first-place and
met on the first day of October in the first game of the first play-off
in the
history of the National League. The teams split the first two games
setting the
stage for the third and final game.
Don
Newcombe of the Dodgers was pitted against Sal Maglie of the Giants.
Both
hurlers had won 23 games during the regular season.
The
game began under overcast skies and a threat of rain. Radio
play-by-play
filtered into schoolrooms, factories, office buildings, city prisons,
barbershops.
The
Wall Street teletype intermingled stock quotations with play-by-play
details of
the Giant-Dodger battle.
The
game was tied 1-1 after seven innings. Then Brooklyn scored three times
in the
top of the eighth.
Many
of the Dodger fans at the Polo Grounds and the multitude listening to
the game
on the radio thought that the Giants would not come back.
Durocher
and the Giants never gave up. "We knew that Newcombe would make the
wrong
pitch," said Monte Irvin. "That was his history."
The
Giants came to bat in the bottom of the ninth inning - only three outs
remained
in their miracle season.
Alvin
Dark led off with a single through the right side of the infield. Don
Mueller
slapped the ball past Dodger first baseman Gil Hodges. Irvin fouled
out. Whitey
Lockman doubled down the left field line. Dark scored.
With
runners on second and third Ralph Branca came in to relieve Newcombe.
Bobby
Thomson waited to bat. Durocher said, "I did not know whether they
would
pitch to Thomson or not. First base was open. Willie Mays, just a
rookie, was
on deck."
Veteran
New York Giant announcer Russ Hodges described the moment to millions
mesmerized at their radios that October afternoon:
"Bobby
Thomson up there swinging.... Bobby batting at .292. Branca pitches and
Bobby
takes a strike call on the inside corner. Lockman without too big of a
lead at
second but he'll be running like the wind if Thomson hits one.
"Branca
throws ... there's a long drive...it's gonna be, I believe. . .' The
precise
moment was 3:58 P.M., October 3, 1951.
"...
the Giants win the pennant!" Hodges screamed the words at the top of
his
voice, all semblance of journalistic objectivity gone. "The Giants win
the
pennant! The Giants win the pennant!"
Hodges
bellowed it out eight times - and then overcome by the moment and
voiceless, he
had to yield the microphone.
Pandemonium
was on parade at the Polo Grounds for hours after the game. For almost
half an
hour after the epic home run, there were so many phone calls placed by
people
in Manhattan and Brooklyn that the New York Telephone Company reported
service
almost broke down.
Bobby Thomson and Ralph Branca would play out their major league careers. But the moment they shared - as hero and goat that October day at the Polo Grounds - would link them forever.
FROMMER ARCHIVES
About
Harvey Frommer: One of the most prolific and
respected sports journalists and oral historians in the United States,
author
of the autobiographies of legends Nolan Ryan, Tony Dorsett, and Red
Holzman,
Dr. Harvey Frommer is an expert on the New York Yankees and has
arguably
written more books, articles and reviews on the New York Yankees than
anyone. In 2010, he was selected by the City of New York as
an
historical consultant for the re-imagined old Yankee Stadium site,
Heritage
Field. A professor for more than two decades in the MALS program at
Dartmouth
College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr. Baseball” by their alumni
magazine.
His ULTIMATE
YANKEE BOOK debuts this fall. PRE ORDER from
AMAZON: http://www.frommerbooks.com/ultimate-yankees.html.
“As a
lifelong Yankees fan, I was devouring every last
delicious new detail about my beloved Bronx Bombers in this fabulous
new book.”
—Ed Henry, author of 42 Faith: The Rest of the Jackie Robinson
Story
Article
is Copyright © 2017 by Harvey Frommer. All
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