Sport: World Series
In an improbable, seven-game stretch
of derring-do, the big men of both the
Pittsburgh Pirates and the New York
Yankees lived up to their clippings. For
New York, Mickey Mantle hit three home
runs, Yogi Berra delivered in the clutch,
and Whitey Ford pitched two shutouts.
For Pittsburgh, Vernon Law won two
games, Ace Reliefer El Roy Face stalked
out of the bullpen to save three games,
and Shortstop Dick Groat, the National
League's leading hitter, rapped out some
timely hits. The Yankees set 51 World
Series records, including a fantastic team
batting average of .338. But in the end,
the 1960 World Series belonged to the
journeyman ballplayer who made up for
his long, lean years with one giddy fling
at glory.
The uprising of the downtrodden started in the very first game. With a season batting average of .273, Pirate Second Baseman Bill Mazeroski, 24, had been ignominiously relegated to the eighth spot in the batting order, the slot reserved for the pattyball hitters. So with one man on, Mazeroski pulled a ball over the ivy-covered leftfield brick wall in Forbes Field, and the Pirates were on their way to their first 6-4 victory.
"Whango!" The Yankees' No. 8 hitter was another second baseman: Bobby Richardson, 25, this year the epitome of the goodfield, no-hit infielder. All season long he had only hit a single home run But in the third game of the series Richardson hit a grand-slam home run to lead his team to a 10-0 victory and in the sixth, belted two towering triples as the Yankees won, 12-0. Richardson's final total of twelve runs batted in set a World
Series record and surpassed by two the previous record held by Ted Kluszewski and Yogi Berra. "I'm just doing the same old things in the same old way," said Richardson in wonderment. "But, whango, something seems to happen to the ball.'' All this was prelude to the seventh and deciding game. In the first inning, with one man on base, up to bat stepped a garrulous vagabond named Rocky Nelson, 35. In his 16-season baseball career, Nelson had played for six big-league teams and been consigned to the minors five times before finally catching on with Pittsburgh, where he was revered for the art of chewing tobacco for a full hour without spitting. Against Yankee Bob Turley (who neither smokes nor chews), Nelson drove a two-run homer over the rightfield wall and the Pirates led 2-0.
Hoisting a Highball. As they had so often over the regular season, the Yankees fought back and were leading, 7-6, in the eighth inning, when another of baseball's castoffs, Catcher Hal Smith, 29, came to bat for Pittsburgh. On a pitch low and fast, Smith hit a three-run homer to give the Pirates a 9-7 lead.
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