Thu Mar 01, 2018 2:05 am
Mickey Mantle.
I grew up in rural Oregon, where the nearest MLB team was in San Francisco...after the Giants moved there from NY.
So my MLB experience was limited to sports pages and watching the CBS Baseball Game of the Week on Saturdays, the only baseball on TV in those ancient times. (We were lucky enough to have a "TV set".) The Yankees were almost always one of the teams, and Mantle almost always hit a home run, if not two.
Very sad in 1961 when his late-season injury took him out of the race with Maris for 61 homers.
I also liked "Diamond" Jim Gentile, who usually hit a home run for the Orioles, one of the Yankees' frequent TV opponents.
Those TV games were called by (retired) Dizzy Dean and Pee Wee Reese, my favorite announcer team ever. I think Dizzy was only semi-literate, but his drawling commentary could be hilarious. If you are old enough, you might recall when Diz was fired by CBS.
I saw the game that resulted in his firing. During a rain delay, the camera was panning the crowd, and paused on a young couple making out in the bleachers. Pee Wee commented that they seemed to be enjoying the game, and Dizzy enthusiastically agreed, saying yup, he kisses her on the strikes, and she kisses him on the balls. I was too young to fully get the joke at the time, but it was the last straw for CBS, and Diz was gone.
I had a love-hate relationship with the Yankees...like most folks, I hated them for always winning, but they were "my" team, the only team I really knew, so I had to love them for that.
Continued over the years...loved the Yankee players and managers, but hated that they always won the pennant, if not the Series. Except for 1978(?), when they were well past their prime, but came from something like 18 games back to take the pennant in the final days, with Guidry's arm leading the way. That I loved.
I finally got to see Mantle in person in his final season (1969?), when I was in college, in a game against the Red Sox at Fenway. He pinch-hit late in the game. His knees were so bad he could barely get to the plate. No home run this time, just a mile-high infield popout, but one I still remember.
Ps to Tony Best: I also heard Mazeroski's homer to beat the Yankees on the radio. I was in school, but had a little transistor radio in my pocket, wired to an earplug, so I was able to listen to the World Series during class...the nuns never caught me!