by rburgh » Sat Aug 27, 2011 10:18 pm
Others who have supposedly done this - Andre Dawson, Mantle, and an unnamed LF (!) who got Sean Casey at first when Sean dogged it. (Assuming one can tell the difference between Casey dogging it and Casey's normal sprint.) The Mantle plays are usually described as gunning down a guy after a wide turn at first; I suspect Dawson is the same.
I suspect this was common in the dead ball era. I once read a fascinating interview with Joe Tinker describing how the Cubs' whole defense would be in motion as soon as the ball left the pitcher's hand. I don't know where to find the link any more, though. But in those circumstances, with guys hitting with their hands apart on the bat trying to steer the ball, it seems likely that RF's might have had many chances to pull this off.
There is a documented case where Clemente recorded an assist on a sac bunt. First and 3rd, Pirates smelled out the squeeze and the corners charged hard. The bunter pushed the ball past the first wave and Clemente threw out the runner from first at third base. This is described on Roberto's biography on baseball-reference.
This same article repeatedly refers to George Sisler as Clemente's batting coach with the Pirates. Sisler was a scout for the Pirates (and also with the Dodgers when Roberto was in Montreal), so perhaps he had an unofficial role somewhere.