quote:
Originally posted by Quincy:
was predominantly a low ball hitter, especially from the left side.
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Oh my goodness:
Mantle, Williams, Mays & Clemente could simply
hit. Period.
The 565 footer, the 21 y/o Mantle hit (and from the right side) was a Chuck Stobbs (LHP) letter high fastball that bounced off the National Boh sign (55 ft high) in left-central (and 460 ft away) at Griffith Stadium, and landed 150 ft away.
“Clark Griffith, Bucky Harris, Casey Stengel and Bill Dickey, who'd seen 'em all in the era of the lively ball, agreed it was the longest drive in the history of the game. ‘I never thought I would live to see a man who could hit a baseball as far as Ruth,’ said the awe-struck Dickey. ‘But now I've seen a man who could hit 'em further.’"
Casey Stengel (who I named my kid after) said in his own Stengelese, regarding Mantle's 565’ foot Tape Measure – “‘I don't care how far it went, It was the longest ball I ever' saw.
Yes, Williams could out hit em,
Mays played a terrific CF
and Clemente's career was tragically cut short,
Yet Mantle out ran many (3.98 H-1b from right side
and on bad wheels), hit, hit bombs, and bunted
from both sides of the plate and to all fields,
(he bunted one thru to CF and ran out a stand-up double), had a plus arm, and tragically, had the alchohol demons follow him throughout his playing days.
Who was the better of the greatest baseball player? Debatable. I choose #7.
then Stan, then Teddy, and then Say Hey!