Originally posted by runningshoes53
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Babe Ruth - May 16, 1915 - The First Home Run
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Originally posted by Sultan_1895-1948Back then a homer wasn't a special event at all. It was just a long hit. The sports sections didn't even keep tabs on them. They listed stolen bases, sacrifices, and batting averages, but not homers. What surprised people that day was how easy it was for Babe to reach such a distant part of the park. 1919 did a lot for the statkeeping aspect of baseball. Papers ran detailed accounts of all Babe's homers, and researchers searched for marks he would be coming up on; Seybold, Cravath, Freeman, and Williamson.
If you look at the box score, Ruth's home run is listed and although not very inspired, the description of the home runs shows the writers were impressed by it. The Times reporter mentioned it twice.
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Back then a homer wasn't a special event at all. It was just a long hit. The sports sections didn't even keep tabs on them. They listed stolen bases, sacrifices, and batting averages, but not homers. What surprised people that day was how easy it was for Babe to reach such a distant part of the park. 1919 did a lot for the statkeeping aspect of baseball. Papers ran detailed accounts of all Babe's homers, and researchers searched for marks he would be coming up on; Seybold, Cravath, Freeman, and Williamson.
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Originally posted by runningshoes53
There is no mention in either paper of this being Ruth’s first career home run.
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Originally posted by runningshoes53On May 6, 1915, The Colossus of Clout hit his first major league home run at the Polo Grounds off Jack Warhop. The Yankees won the day, 4 to 3 in thirteen innings.
There is no mention in either paper of this being Ruth’s first career home run.
His power was becoming evident when he hit a long home run in St. Louis on July 21,1915. He also had a single and a double in that July game. The home run cleared the bleachers crossed Grand Avenue and landed on the far sidewalk. When he left the game the St. Louis crowd cheered him wildly, as though he was one of their own.
This was 1915 and he was a pitcher hitting more like a position player. Also that long home run was hit in the dead ball era using a ball that was not as lively as the ball that would come into the game in the near future.
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Babe Ruth - May 16, 1915 - The First Home Run
On May 6, 1915, The Colossus of Clout hit his first major league home run at the Polo Grounds off Jack Warhop. The Yankees won the day, 4 to 3 in thirteen innings.
This is how the Boston Globe described Ruth’s record starting home run the following day:
In the third, Ruth, who impressed the onlookers as being a hitter in the first rank, swatted a low ball into the upper tier of the right-field grandstand and trotted about hte (sic) bases to slow music.
For Boston, the big left handed pitcher Babe Ruth, was all that a pitcher is supposed to be, and some more. He put his team into the running in the third inning by smashing a mighty rap into the upper tier of the right-field grandstand………. Jack Warhop’s pitching was not badly abused by the Bostons. They did not him very often but when they did connect, the ball seemed to have every intention of going out of the lot. Ruth was the first batsman to face Warhop in the third inning and with no apparent effort he slammed a home run into the grandstand
I was going to describe the game, but I though you guys would have a better time figuring it out from the box score. Here’s the score from the New York Times. The score from the Boston Globe was not as legible.
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