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discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 06:42 PM Aug 2018

Odd baseball trivia (add your own)

Pitcher Jim Abbott was born without a right hand and had a 10-season baseball career, including throwing a no-hitter for the New York Yankees vs. Cleveland in 1993.

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Odd baseball trivia (add your own) (Original Post) discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 OP
How about this one? True Dough Aug 2018 #1
Kittle hit one over the roof in old Comisky Park CanonRay Aug 2018 #4
Kirk Gibson Power 2 the People Aug 2018 #2
Max Kepler Ohiogal Aug 2018 #3
Louis Soxalexis CanonRay Aug 2018 #5
Every single MLB baseball is... discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #6
Hoyt Wilhelm hit a home run in his very first MLB at-bat Major Nikon Aug 2018 #7
The Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings... discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #8
There's a book about it. bif Aug 2018 #20
Other trivia discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #22
Now that's a humdinger True Dough Aug 2018 #9
Especially when you consider he was a knuckleballer and a HOFer Major Nikon Aug 2018 #17
Babe Ruth was once slapped by Calvin Coolidge. Shemp Howard Aug 2018 #10
In Game 2 of the 1916 World Series... discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #13
Jimmie Reese was hired as a conditioning coach by the Angels at the age of 72. VOX Aug 2018 #11
In 1932, the Yankees' Joe Sewell struck out THREE times in 503 at-bats. VOX Aug 2018 #12
Old Hoss Radbourn went 59-12 with a 1.38 ERA in 1884 for the Providence Grays FSogol Aug 2018 #14
Eddie Gaedel had only one plate appearance in his career. SeattleVet Aug 2018 #15
Don Wert's last name Harker Aug 2018 #16
The Simpson's SkyDancer Aug 2018 #18
Dock Ellis threw a no-hitter in 1970 while tripping on LSD. LuckyCharms Aug 2018 #19
Great movie, highly recommended. N/t FSogol Aug 2018 #26
The original distance from the pitchers mound to home plate bif Aug 2018 #21
Willie Mays holds the record for hitting home runs in the most different innings. Brother Buzz Aug 2018 #23
Two Hall of Famers were born in Donora, PA, on November 21... First Speaker Aug 2018 #24
History of the warning track bif Aug 2018 #25
Satchel Paige was 42 when he made his first appearance in Cleveland in 1948 underpants Aug 2018 #27
No pitcher ever threw a no-hitter at Forbes Field. n/t cloudbase Aug 2018 #28
Joe Namath - offers from 6 MLB teams. Drafted by the Cardinals. Signed with the Jets. underpants Aug 2018 #29
Ending an inning with 2 pitches? MyOwnPeace Aug 2018 #30
Okay that's impressive underpants Aug 2018 #35
In 140+ years and 200K+ games of major league/professional ball, there've been only 23 perfect games RockRaven Aug 2018 #31
And Harvey Haddix MyOwnPeace Aug 2018 #32
Babe Ruth started an almost-perfect game... First Speaker Aug 2018 #34
I was at the one at Turner Field. I turned to my friend and said... Phentex Aug 2018 #39
The Seattle Mariners hit a reverse cycle the other night against Houston... Wounded Bear Aug 2018 #33
Duane Kuiper played twelve seasons in the majors. SalmonChantedEvening Aug 2018 #36
To quote Billy Beane: "He gets on base a lot. Do I care if it's a walk or a hit?" discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #37
Moe Berg a most unusual athlete yellowdogintexas Aug 2018 #38
Just saw this... True Dough Aug 2018 #40
Same guy, two grand slams in one inning Shrek Aug 2018 #41
Shoeshine Incident in 1957 Snellius Aug 2018 #42
What do the Mets, Astros, A's, Yankees, Royals, Braves, White Sox, Pirates, Dodgers, Rockies.. discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #43
A young boy named Tim Smith had Tug McGraw's baseball card taped to his bedroom wall. discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #44
Gaylord Perry was a notoriously weak hitter. discntnt_irny_srcsm Aug 2018 #45

True Dough

(26,976 posts)
1. How about this one?
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 07:05 PM
Aug 2018

Ron Kittle hit more home runs per at-bat than Lou Gehrig (1 every 15.39 at-bats vs. 1 every 16.23)

Power 2 the People

(2,437 posts)
2. Kirk Gibson
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 07:17 PM
Aug 2018

Kirk Gibson played 17 years in the major leagues. Between the years 1984 and 1988 he averaged
27 homeruns, 86 rbi's,30 steals and a .282 batting average. He was National League MVP in 1988 and got MVP votes in 1981,1984 and 1985.

He was never voted to an All Star game or named as a reserve.

]

Ohiogal

(40,783 posts)
3. Max Kepler
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 07:49 PM
Aug 2018

Of the Minnesota Twins, was born in Berlin, Germany, to parents who were both professional ballet dancers. He attended school on a tennis scholarship before deciding he preferred baseball.

CanonRay

(16,202 posts)
5. Louis Soxalexis
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 08:02 PM
Aug 2018

played for the Cleveland Spiders fron 1897 to 1899. He was the first Native American to play professional major league baseball, having grown up on the Penobscot reservation in Maine. He had both a short carer and life, dying from alcoholism and heart disease in 1913. In 1915, the Cleveland pro baseball team was looking for a new nickname, and a young girl wrote in about Soxalexis, and the team was named the Cleveland Indians.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
6. Every single MLB baseball is...
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 08:15 PM
Aug 2018

...rubbed in Lena Blackburne Baseball Rubbing Mud, a unique "very fine" mud only found in a secret location near Palmyra, New Jersey.


I live near Palmyra. Anyone need some mud? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lena_Blackburne

Major Nikon

(36,925 posts)
7. Hoyt Wilhelm hit a home run in his very first MLB at-bat
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 08:26 PM
Aug 2018

He never did so again throughout his 21 year career.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
8. The Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings...
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 08:30 PM
Aug 2018

...two teams from the Triple-A International League, played the longest game in professional baseball history. It lasted 33 innings, with 8 hours and 25 minutes of playing time. 32 innings were played April 18/19, 1981, at McCoy Stadium in Pawtucket, Rhode Island and the final 33rd inning was played June 23, 1981. Pawtucket won the game, 3–2.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
22. Other trivia
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 01:51 PM
Aug 2018

* Sam Bowen hit a fly ball to center that reportedly left the field before the wind blew it back to Rochester outfielder Dallas Williams.

* Several times, one side neared victory before circumstances changed. When Wade Boggs drove in the tying run in the bottom of the 21st inning after a Rochester run, even the Pawtucket players groaned. He recalled that, "I didn't know if the guys on the team wanted to hug me or slug me."

* When Boggs' father complimented him for getting four hits in the game, the player admitted that he had had 12 at bats.

Shemp Howard

(889 posts)
10. Babe Ruth was once slapped by Calvin Coolidge.
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 08:43 PM
Aug 2018

I'm just kidding. I made that up.
(I'm in a puckish mood tonight. Please don't yell at me.)

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
13. In Game 2 of the 1916 World Series...
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 09:25 PM
Aug 2018

...Ruth pitched 14-inning complete game to beat the Dodgers 2-1. It is still the most innings ever thrown by one pitcher in a single postseason game.

VOX

(22,976 posts)
11. Jimmie Reese was hired as a conditioning coach by the Angels at the age of 72.
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 09:00 PM
Aug 2018

Reese (born James Herman Solomon to a Jewish family in New York City, he was raised in Los Angeles).

He played or participated in professional baseball longer than anyone except the Cardinals’ Red Schoendienst, who passed Reese’s record in 2016; he started as a batboy with the old Pacific Coast League Los Angeles Angels in 1917 (or 1919, sources vary) until the day he died in 1994 at age 93, still a coach with the Angels.

Along the way, he played two seasons (1930-31) at second base with the New York Yankees, and was Babe Ruth’s roomie; or as Reese put it, “I roomed with Babe Ruth’s suitcase.” In 1930 he batted .346 in 188 at bats, striking out only 8 times.

As a coach with the Angels, his specialty was hitting fungoes for fielding practice. Nolan Ryan kiddingly said (while he gasped for air), “Who is that old guy who’s trying to kill me?” Reese and Ryan became lifetime friends, with Ryan naming one of his sons Reese Ryan, after the beloved coach.

Per Wikipedia: “Numerous Angels players remarked on his seemingly uncanny ability to place fungos where he wanted. He even occasionally "pitched" batting practice with his fungo bat, standing at the pitcher's rubber and consistently hitting line drives over the middle of the plate.”

Reese never married, had no children, and was mostly estranged from his extended family. He lived in a modest apartment in Westwood, near UCLA. He was present and in uniform for every home game until his health finally failed. The Angels honored him by permanently retiring his uniform number 50. He was known as the “nicest man in baseball.”

VOX

(22,976 posts)
12. In 1932, the Yankees' Joe Sewell struck out THREE times in 503 at-bats.
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 09:16 PM
Aug 2018

Joe Sewell played shortstop and third base for the Cleveland Indians (1920–1930) and the New York Yankees (1931–1933). And he must have had zoom lenses in his eyes, and maybe even the power to slow down time itself. His batting accomplishments are absolutely astonishing, and make the players of today seem like massive underachievers.

Per Wikipedia:
Sewell struck out 114 times in 7,132 career at-bats for an average of one strikeout every 62.5 at-bats, second only to Willie Keeler (63.1). He also holds the single-season record for fewest strikeouts over a full season, with 3, set in 1932. Sewell also had 3 strikeouts in 1930, albeit in just 353 at-bats (as opposed to 503 in his record-setting year), as well as three other full seasons (1925, 1929, 1933) with 4 strikeouts. He struck out ten or more times in only four seasons, and his highest strikeout total was twenty, during the 1922 season. For his 1925–1933 seasons, Sewell struck out 4, 6, 7, 9, 4, 3, 8, 3, and 4 times. He also holds the record for consecutive games without recording a strikeout, at 115.

FSogol

(47,638 posts)
14. Old Hoss Radbourn went 59-12 with a 1.38 ERA in 1884 for the Providence Grays
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 09:32 PM
Aug 2018

He appeared in 75 games, started 73 and pitched 73 complete games with 11 shutouts and 2 saves. He pitched 678.2 innings and had 441 strikeouts.

There is a good book on his season: "Fifty-Nine in '84: Old Hoss Radbourn, Barehanded Baseball, and the Greatest Season a Pitcher Ever Had" by Edward Achorn

Old Hoss also is flipping his middle finger in every known photo of him, including team photos and baseball cards.

SeattleVet

(5,912 posts)
15. Eddie Gaedel had only one plate appearance in his career.
Fri Aug 10, 2018, 09:54 PM
Aug 2018

He was 3'7" tall and weighed 65 lbs.

In a tight crouch at the plate his strike zone was measured to be about 1.5".

His number was ⅛.

He was walked on 4 pitches.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddie_Gaedel

 

SkyDancer

(561 posts)
18. The Simpson's
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 06:36 AM
Aug 2018

There is an actual minor league baseball team named after the Springfield Isotopes of The Simpsons episode "Hungry, Hungry Homer." They are the Albuquerque Isotopes.

bif

(27,076 posts)
21. The original distance from the pitchers mound to home plate
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 10:07 AM
Aug 2018

Was 60' 0". It was hand written and the 0" was misread as 6". That's the distance it's been ever since.

Brother Buzz

(40,111 posts)
23. Willie Mays holds the record for hitting home runs in the most different innings.
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 01:58 PM
Aug 2018

Inning Date Pitcher Team
1 5-28-1951 Warren Spahn Boston
2 6-6-1951 Willie Ramsdell Cincinnati
3 4-18-1954 Carl Erskine Brooklyn
4 6-27-1951 Don Newcombe Brooklyn
5 8-30-1951 Vern Law Pittsburgh
6 6-23-1951 Turk Lown Chicago
7 6-18-1951 Joe Presko St. Louis
8 6-17-1951 (1G) Howie Pollet St. Louis
9 7-22-1951 (1G) Ken Raffensberger Cincinnati
10 6-22-1951 Dutch Leonard Chicago
11 7-4-1955 (2G) Lino Donoso Pittsburgh
12 6-4-1955 Warren Hacker Chicago
13 7-3-1951 Jocko Thompson Philadelphia
14 4-30-1954 Warren Hacker Chicago
15 9-27-1968 Ted Abernathy Cincinnati
16 7-26-1963 Warren Spahn Milwaukee

........................................................

Note: Willie Mays' walk-off home run in inning 16 was mostly relegated to the footnotes to the most spectacular pitching dual in baseball history, and most certainly merits mentioning as some righteous baseball Trivia.


July 2, 1963: Marichal outduels Spahn in 16-inning thriller

As the 1963 National League season moved into its fourth month, the Milwaukee Braves visited San Francisco for the second time. On July 2, San Francisco sent 25-year-old Juan Marichal out against Warren Spahn, 17 years his senior, in the Tuesday night opener of a three-game set.

The Giants’ starter was looking to avenge a 3-1 loss on April 28 to the antediluvian left-hander, pitching in his 19th major league campaign. The Giants were in third place, 1½ games behind the top-seated St. Louis Cardinals, while the Braves were a .500 ball club, sixth, 6 ½ games back of St. Louis. Marichal had won 12 games in 15 decisions for his team, and Spahn was sporting an 11-3 record for 38-38 Milwaukee.

At slightly past eight o’clock, Marichal took the Candlestick Park mound. Four hours and 15 innings later, he was still toiling there. And so was Warren Spahn–in a scoreless pitching duel.

The Braves had mounted a serious scoring threat in the top of the fourth inning. Marichal disposed of the first two batters before trouble arose. The right-hander walked Norm Larker, and Mack “The Knife” Jones followed with a single to left, moving Larker to second. Del Crandall hit a soft single to center that Willie Mays caught, then lasered to the plate to nail Larker trying to score. It had been a charmed half-inning for the Dominican pitcher. Henry Aaron led off the frame with a drive to deep left field that Marichal said, the next day, he thought was gone.1 Willie McCovey hauled the ball in a few feet from the fence, as Candlestick Point’s strong westerly winds knocked it down.

McCovey nearly ended the game in the bottom of the ninth. The Giants’ left fielder smoked a pitch deep to right field, just missing a home run–or so said the first base umpire. Local beat writer Curly Grieve expanded: “McCovey was so enraged when Chris Pelekoudas called the blast a foul that momentarily it appeared he would push the arbiter around the outfield and wind up ejected in the clubhouse. McCovey, [manager] Alvin Dark and [first base coach] Larry Jansen surrounded Pelekoudas, claiming the ball left Candlestick fair. Pelekoudas stuck to his call, which took courage.”2

“I followed the ball all the way out but evidently the umpire didn’t. It was at least three feet fair when it left the park. I think the umpire was watching where it landed and made his call on that. As hard as I hit the ball it didn’t have a chance to curve before leaving the ball park,” McCovey said after the game.3 When he stepped back into the batter’s box, a miffed McCovey grounded out to first base, with Spahn covering. After a two-out single by Felipe Alou, Orlando Cepeda popped up to third base, and the scoreless game moved into extra innings.

With two outs in the top of the 13th, Braves’ second baseman Frank Bolling singled off Marichal, ending a string of 16 batters in a row retired by the Giants’ workhorse since a walk to Aaron in the eighth. Bolling was left stranded by the next hitter, Aaron, who popped up to first baseman Cepeda in foul ground.

Marichal was scheduled to bat third that inning. Cepeda later recalled the moment in a 1998 memoir. Manager Alvin Dark asked Marichal if he had had enough. Cepeda remembered Marichal barking at Dark, “A 42-year-old man is still pitching. I can’t come out!”4 Dark accepted — or was startled into acceptance by Marichal’s ardor — and let him bat. Marichal flied out to complete the inning, and the game pushed forward.

The Giants made a strong bid to get Marichal a win in the lower half of the 14th. With two outs, they loaded the bases on a double, walk and error by Denis Menke, in at third base for Eddie Mathews. But Spahn then coolly retired Giants’ catcher Ed Bailey on a fly to center, ending the inning and extending the deadlock.

Marichal went back out for the 15th time and retired the side in order. Likewise, Spahn put the Giants down cleanly in the bottom of the frame. The pitchers had recorded 90 outs through 15 innings of gritty pitching, neither yielding a run.5

In the 16th, Marichal allowed a two-out single to Menke, and then registered his 48th out of the night on Larker’s comebacker to the mound. It was Marichal’s 227th pitch.

When the Giants hit, Spahn retired Harvey Kuenn on a fly out. That brought up future Hall of Famer Mays, still hitless on the long night. Now, Mays drove Spahn’s first pitch through the teeth of the wind in left. The ball cleared the fence, and with that, a masterfully-pitched game dramatically ended. Marichal was the exhausted victor; Spahn, the valiantly defeated.

“I’ve been around a long time and that’s the finest exhibition of throwing I’ve ever seen,” Henry Aaron assessed. “It may be 10 years or even 20 before you see another its equal.”6 Only once, in the more than half-century since, has one pitcher thrown as many innings in one major league baseball game as Marichal did that night against Spahn.7

After the game, Spahn’s teammates greeted their aged warrior--the last player to enter their clubhouse because of an interview session--with their own tribute. Quoting Spahn’s fellow starting pitcher Bob Sadowski, writer Jim Kaplan described it: “When Spahn arrived, everyone stood, applauded, and lined up to shake his hand. ‘If you didn’t have tears in your eyes, you weren’t nothing,’”8

Over the 16 innings, Marichal allowed eight hits and four walks and struck out 10. Spahn, who threw 201 pitches of his own, yielded nine hits, walked only one (intentionally), and fanned a pair. Both men made their next scheduled starts five days later, the Sunday before the All-Star Game. Spahn complained of a sore elbow, which apparently flared up enough to cause him to miss two starts later in the month, but he pitched through it to lead the 1963 National League with 22 complete games.




First Speaker

(4,858 posts)
24. Two Hall of Famers were born in Donora, PA, on November 21...
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 04:08 PM
Aug 2018

...Stan Musial, in 1920, and Ken Griffey, Jr, in 1969. Both were left-handed hitting outfielders.

bif

(27,076 posts)
25. History of the warning track
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 05:08 PM
Aug 2018

Wasn't to warn outfielders they were near the wall. Bicycling was all the rage in the early 1900. And baseball stadiums presented bike races around the perimeter of the field, and made a track out of dirt. This was the beginning of the warning track.

underpants

(196,848 posts)
29. Joe Namath - offers from 6 MLB teams. Drafted by the Cardinals. Signed with the Jets.
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 05:52 PM
Aug 2018

Upon graduation from high school in 1961, he received offers from several Major League Baseball teams, including the Yankees, Indians, Reds, Pirates, and Phillies,[10] but football prevailed. Namath told interviewers that he wanted to sign with the Pirates and play baseball like his idol, Roberto Clemente, but elected to play football because his mother wanted him to get a college education.[11]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Namath

Way back in 1961, before the amateur draft as we know it was established, the Chicago Cubs tried to woo Joe Namath into playing baseball professionally. Then 18 years old, Namath was made a pretty substantial offer of $50,000. It was his mother, Rose, who put her foot down and insisted Joe go to college instead. Of course, “Broadway Joe” went to the University of Alabama and would ultimately sign to play with the New York Jets, putting an end to any thoughts of professional baseball. The decision clearly worked out just fine for Namath.

https://www.bleedcubbieblue.com/2018/6/9/17438362/chicago-cubs-mlb-draft-joe-namath-nfl-players

RockRaven

(19,563 posts)
31. In 140+ years and 200K+ games of major league/professional ball, there've been only 23 perfect games
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 06:00 PM
Aug 2018

The first and second occurred only 5 days apart in 1880. The 3rd perfect game didn't occur until 24 years later.

Because of significant rules changes in 1893 and also in 1901, most people set aside those first two perfect games and parse the language like this: "there have been 21 'modern era' perfect games."

As such the shortest time between perfect games in the modern era was 20 days, in 2010, and the longest was 34 years, 1922-1956.

Only twice in the modern era have there been multiple perfect games in a season: 2010 (two) and 2012 (three).

First Speaker

(4,858 posts)
34. Babe Ruth started an almost-perfect game...
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 11:15 PM
Aug 2018

...in, I think, 1917--he walked the first batter, then got into an argument with an umpire and got tossed. Then Ernie Shore, the reliever, picked the runner off first, and retired the next 26 batters in a row. This was regarded as a "perfect game" for a long time, until MLB officially changed it to a "mere" no-hitter...

Phentex

(16,713 posts)
39. I was at the one at Turner Field. I turned to my friend and said...
Sun Aug 12, 2018, 01:54 PM
Aug 2018

Why are we cheering for the other team?

She said because it was a perfect game.

I said well it was a little slow so I don't know if I'd call it perfect.

Then she explained to me what it meant.

Wounded Bear

(64,446 posts)
33. The Seattle Mariners hit a reverse cycle the other night against Houston...
Sat Aug 11, 2018, 11:07 PM
Aug 2018

In the top of the first inning, they hit a home run, a triple, a double, and a single in that order.

Haniger HR
Span 3B
Segura 2B
Cruz 1B

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
37. To quote Billy Beane: "He gets on base a lot. Do I care if it's a walk or a hit?"
Sun Aug 12, 2018, 08:50 AM
Aug 2018

He's a solid player.

yellowdogintexas

(23,726 posts)
38. Moe Berg a most unusual athlete
Sun Aug 12, 2018, 01:40 PM
Aug 2018

Morris Berg was an American catcher and coach in Major League Baseball who later served as a spy for the Office of Strategic Services during World War II.

Education: Columbia University, New York University, Princeton University, Columbia Law School, Barringer High School

I learned about him when I found a biography which I gave to my father. He would read if the subjects were of high interest to him.

His favorites: Anything Will Rogers, baseball, and WWII.

Snellius

(6,881 posts)
42. Shoeshine Incident in 1957
Sat Aug 25, 2018, 10:52 AM
Aug 2018

In the last game of the '57 World Series between Braves and Yankees, Milwaukee pinch hitter Nippy Jones claimed he was hit with a pitch. Ump said not. Stengel screamed no. Until Nippy picked it up and showed the ump shoe polish on the ball. Took first base forcing a run. The turning point of the game and the series.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
43. What do the Mets, Astros, A's, Yankees, Royals, Braves, White Sox, Pirates, Dodgers, Rockies..
Sat Aug 25, 2018, 11:45 AM
Aug 2018

...Blue Jays, Cardinals, and Tigers all have in common?

Octavio Dotel pitched for all of them, making him the only person to ever play for 13 major league teams.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
44. A young boy named Tim Smith had Tug McGraw's baseball card taped to his bedroom wall.
Sat Aug 25, 2018, 11:45 AM
Aug 2018

One day he found his birth certificate and learned that Tug McGraw was his father. The boy then changed his last name. He grew up to become country music superstar Tim McGraw.

discntnt_irny_srcsm

(18,775 posts)
45. Gaylord Perry was a notoriously weak hitter.
Sat Aug 25, 2018, 02:54 PM
Aug 2018

For seven major league seasons and over 300 plate appearances, he failed to hit a single dinger. San Francisco Giants manager Alvin Dark joked with reporters, saying: "They'll put a man on the moon before Gaylord Perry hits a home run!" Then on July 20, 1969, a matter of minutes after Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, Gaylord Perry hit his first major league home run!

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