We are talking real money if you have Don Larsen 1956 baseball card in great condition |
Baseball is
different than other games. Not only do teams keep track of wins
and losses and division standings,
but the performance of every single player
is closely tracked, each swing of
the bat noted, every out and
everyone who touched the ball to
make the out. It is all traced in
meticulously kept statistics. With a large enough reference, the number cruncher talking into the earpiece of the color commentator can feed him the info on exactly how the switch hitting third baseman fares
against right handed knuckle ball
pitchers with men on base and two outs.
There are certain stats that represent feats so rare and
marvelous that they happen only a handful of times a season, or sometimes only
once or twice in a decade. When a pitcher throws a no-hitter, a short-stop
turns an un-assisted triple play, a
batter legs out an inside the park home
run, or a runner on third base steals home the achievement will be front page news in sports sections all
over the country and slo-mo tape
will lead every sportscast and be
replayed endlessly on ESPN highlights.
But as special as these
accomplishments are none hold a candle to the Holy Grail—the Perfect Game. Non baseball fans and even many casual fans
are often confused between a no-hitter and a perfect game. No-hitters are special but a handful are
thrown every year. A perfect game is
truly extraordinary. In the history of Major League Baseball there have only
been 23 perfect games thrown, 21 of them in Modern Era—since the turn of the 20th Century. In a perfect
game no one reaches base for any reason—no hits,
no reaching base on an error, no base on balls, no hit batsmen, no taking base on a third strike and wild pitch. 27 batters in 9 innings come up to the plate
and head back to the dugout dejected.
A perfect game requires not only
brilliant pitching, but flawless fielding, an off day for the opposing team’s offense, sheer luck, and every close call by the umpires going just right. In
every perfect game pressure begins to mount on the pitcher in about the 7th inning when both the pitcher and
everyone in the stands begins to realize that at the very least a no-hitter is
possible. By the 9th inning the tension is almost unbearable. Several pitchers have lost their perfect
games with two outs and a full count to the batter.
So with all of the stress of a
perfect game in any circumstances, imagine it in a World Series. The
unimaginable happened on October 8, 1956 in Yankee Stadium against the Brooklyn
Dodgers in Game 5. The Series was a legendary match-up of two New York City teams with a history and
the focus of unprecedented press
attention—and a nationwide audience
thanks to television.
Larsen lets go the last pitch. A screen save from the kinescope of the TV broadcast. |
The Series was tied at two
each. Brooklyn manager Walt Alston opted to go with opening
game winner and staff ace Sal
Maglie. It was a wise choice. Maglie pitched a gem giving up only 5 hits
and 2 runs in a complete game effort.
But it wasn’t enough.
Casey Stengel wanted
to save his ace Whitey Ford and
opted to bring Don Larsen to the
mound, a decision that surprised sports writers, fans, and the pitcher
himself. Larsen had blown a six run lead in Game 2 and was out of it in the second inning.
Larsen was at best a journeyman pitcher. He was having his best year, finishing with a
win-loss record of 11-5. That year he
developed a no-windup style that
confused batters. Over his entire Major League career of 14 years with 8
clubs, much of the time as a spot
starter and reliever, he racked
up a losing record of 81-91. In fact he
was best known not for his on the mound performance but for breaking curfew and spending late nights in Manhattan night spots. Stengel told the press, “The only thing he
fears is sleep.”
But for whatever reason, Larsen was
nearly flawless that day. He had
complete command of his pitchers. Only
the Dodgers’ Pee Wee Reese was able
to work the count to three balls,
and that was in the first inning before the Yankee right hander settled down.
He was also the beneficiary of solid
defense. In the second inning Jackie Robinson smashed a line drive that bounced off the third baseman’s glove into the mitt of
shortstop Gil McDougal who threw out
the speedy Robinson in a bang-bang play. In the fifth inning Mickey Mantle, a center
fielder best remembered as a hitter, snagged a back-handed catch of a deep
drive by Gil Hodges.
The next batter, Sandy Amoros hit one deep to right field that went foul by
inches. After that it was pretty much
clear sailing. Mantle’s three hits
including the home run in the fourth
inning that broke the scoreless tie provided all the offensive punch Larson
needed.
By the sixth inning tension began to
build in the stadium. In the broadcast booth Mel Allen and Vin Scully adhered to the superstition of not mentioning a
no-hitter in progress. Larsen was casual
and relaxed, even as his dug-out grew tense.
He spent the seventh inning stretch smoking a cigarette in the club house.
Later in the game he broke tradition himself by asking Mantle if he
thought he “could do it.” The
superstitious Mantle reportedly told the pitcher to “Shut the fuck up” and
stalked away. No one on the bench would
talk to him.
With two outs in the ninth inning
pinch hitter Dale Mitchell fanned on
Larsen’s 97th pitch. Mitchell thought
the pitch was high. So did Mantle from his vantage point in
center field. But veteran umpire Babe Pinelli, in his last game behind
the plate before retirement called it a strike.
It was over. An unimaginable
perfect game in the World Series.
Catcher Yogi Berra raced to the mound and leapt into Larsen’s arms, the
moment captured in one of the most iconic
photographs in baseball history. The
dugout emptied and he was mobbed by team mates, fans rushed onto the field.
The Yankees went on to win the fall classic in seven games. Larson was named the series Most Valuable Player.
It was the last hurrah for the
Dodgers in Brooklyn. After the next
season when they did not get into the post-season,
the team relocated to Los Angeles.
Larsen never had as good a
season. By the time he was finished with
the Yankees in ’59 he was a spot starter and a reliever. Over the final seasons of his career he
hurled for the Kansas City Athletics,
Chicago White Sox, San Francisco Giants, Houston Colts/Astros, and the Baltimore Orioles. Out of the big leagues entirely in 1966, he
returned for one final turn in the Majors the following year with the Chicago Cubs. The comeback was not successful. He threw his last game in the Bigs at Wrigley Field on July 7, 1967.
He finished the season and the following one toiling in the Cubs farm system before finally
retiring.
For years kinescope footage of the television broadcast was believed to be
lost. But in 2007 all but the first
inning was discovered by Illinois memorabilia
collector Doak Ewing. It was privately screened for Larson, Berra
and about a hundred others later that year and broadcast on the MLB Network on New Years Day 2009 with Bob
Costas interviews of Berra and Larsen.
The 85 year old Larsen is still
living and enjoys talking about his perfect game. Who wouldn’t.
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