OT: 46 years ago today I saw the greatest HR in my lifetime

Submitted by Zoltanrules on

What was the most impressive home run you ever saw?

Mine was at the 1971 All Star game held at Tiger Stadium that featured some of the greatest players ever assembled:  Rose,Mays, Bench, McCovey, Aaron, Stargell,Carlton, Seaver, Brock , Clemente, Yaz, Palmer, Brooks Robinson, Frank Robinson, Carew, Killebrew, Kaline and it just went on and on ...a total of 26 future HOFers !

In the bottom of the third, a young Reggie Jackson, was sent to pitch hit and sent a pitch into orbit off Doc Ellis. The ball was RISING as it hit the light transformer on the top of the right field roof. It has been estimated to have traveled 539 feet had it not hit the transformer.  Ernie Harwell said it was the hardest hit ball he ever saw.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2D9mBNnpUY . I will embed below.

softshoes

July 14th, 2017 at 4:22 PM ^

Only ball I ever caught was front row upperdeck leftfield. Mickey Stanley hit it and it came almost straight down and hit the rail and bounced up then down into my hands. Other than the time I had first row tickets behind home plate they were the best seats ever.

pdgoblue25

July 14th, 2017 at 11:12 AM ^

Municipal stadium was exactly the same, nothing like going to a ball game with your Dad only go to the troughs and be eye level with strange dicks.  As a bonus, there was always at least one turd in there.

I don't know if anyone is an F is for Family fan, but Bill Burr animated this experience perfectly. 

ckersh74

July 14th, 2017 at 12:13 AM ^

I have the game on DVD. 

Holy hell, the names that played in that game. Six homers hit in that game, and all six came off the bat of guys that wound up in Cooperstown. You know the NL side is loaded when Willie Mays is hiting leadoff, and Hank Aaron is right behind him in the #2 spot. 

10 Hall of Famers in the starting lineups. 7 more on the bench/pitching staff in the NL, and 4 more on the AL bench/staff, plus both managers (Weaver and Sparky). 

EDIT: 13 NL players in the HOF, plus Sparky and Walter Alston. 9 on the AL roster, plus Earl Weaver, for a total of 25. 

BeatOSU52

July 13th, 2017 at 11:18 PM ^

I was at the game Bonds hit 752 and 753 at Wrigley Field.  752 is memorable for how much he crushed it and it was the first pitch of his first at-bat.  

 

 

 

 

UMfan21

July 13th, 2017 at 11:43 PM ^

I was at the game Cecil Fielder hit his first HR the year he got 51. it meant little at the time, and 51 in a season means little after the steroid era, but that was a fun year for detroit.

Blue4U

July 14th, 2017 at 12:26 AM ^

The first HR in '84 World Series.  Goose Gossage wanted to pitch to Gibby while Manager Dick Williams wanted to walk him.  Gossage talked Williams out of it and paid the price.

The second was when a hobbled Gibby (bad left hamstring and swollen right knee) Pinch hit with 2outs in the 9th and blasted one out vs Eck and the A's in '88.  Down 4-3 bottom 9th, 2 outs, full count, runner on 2nd.  Hollywood couldn't have written a better scene.  Dodger fans loved Gibby like we did.  I hated to see him leave Detroit.

Blue4U

July 14th, 2017 at 9:24 AM ^

IIRC, the story goes Gibby went to Lasorda and said "I have 1 good at bat in me.  Use me."  It was Gibby's decision to PH.

An interesting sidenote:  A friend of mine was a family aquaintance of Lasorda.  Before it was public news that Gibby was signing with the Dodgers as a free agent, Lasorda told my friend that they just picked up a player that'll change the team.  

BlueInWisconsin

July 14th, 2017 at 12:08 AM ^

I saw fielder hit one over the roof at Tiger Stadium. Also witnessed Tim Rains hit an absolute screamer into the deep upper deck in right. I was in the first row of the overhang and it went over my head like a rocket headed for space.

Unsalted

July 14th, 2017 at 12:24 AM ^

Hit a monster HR to the upper deck in centerfield. Years ago I read somewhere that he said it was one of the longest HRs he ever hit but no one remembers it. i'm guessing it was over 450ft.

 

Jack Hammer

July 14th, 2017 at 3:54 AM ^

I was 20 rows behind home plate for Mag's blast. Best HR I ever witnessed. Storming the streets of Detroit that night with our first pennant since 84. Incredible night.

Also was on the RF narrow walkway in SF when Bonds hit his 500th over my head into McCovey Cove.

Not a HR (or even a hit) but was at Safeco when Junior had his last AB. Weak grounder to the right side. He looked old and tired jogging to 1B. I literally thought at that moment that he should hang it up. Next day he unexpectedly left Seattle and his career was over. Saw him at Tiger Stadium when he was a rookie and his last AB in Seattle. Bookends of what I think is one of the best careers by a classy, no-controversy player in an era riddled with scandal.

UMinSF

July 14th, 2017 at 3:13 AM ^

Just a little kid, but I'll never forget the sound of the crowd when Regjacks hit that colossal shot:

"oooooooooohhhhhh"

50,000 awestruck people.

For a long time, that was the only game in my life the American League won - NL won 19 of 20. Seems strange now that the AL dominates.

Unforgettable game, incredible array of talent.

 

xtramelanin

July 14th, 2017 at 3:44 AM ^

Robert tick comes up in the bottom of the 8th with the bases loaded. Last time the tiger would ever bat There. Fick hit ball out of the park (or close, bounced on the roof. People were in tears it was Such a moment

ABOUBENADHEM

July 14th, 2017 at 6:54 AM ^

I've always thought hitting four home runs in a game was one of the neatest stats in baseball. It's amazing to me how many people have done it. Colavito was one of them.

Wolverine 73

July 14th, 2017 at 9:56 AM ^

One of the worst trades the Tribe ever made, not only did they get the bad end of the deal, they traded a player who was adored in Cleveland. GM Frank Lane (easily the most hated sports figure in town before Art Modell wrested that title from him) called it "trading a pound of hamburger for a pound of steak." Harvey Kueen had won the batting title the year before, and never came close to replicating that feat. Infuriated the fan base and put the team on a downward slide for years.

901 P

July 14th, 2017 at 7:38 AM ^

Kirby Puckett in game 6 of the 1991 World Series. What an incredible series--Puckett's walk off in Game 6 and then Morris' 10-inning shutout in Game 7.

SAMgO

July 14th, 2017 at 7:43 AM ^

When I was in 14 year old AAA ball I threw a 1-2 curve down and away, great pitch if I do say so myself, and this mutant kid who may have turned into Aaron Judge (never seen them both in the same place at least) went down Vlad style and clubbed it out of the yard. I was both intensely disappointed and impressed.

UM Griff

July 14th, 2017 at 7:51 AM ^

Out of the ballpark - I don't remember the year. My dad had just gotten up to get hot dogs for us.....he heard the roar of the crowd from the stands.