[Home]History of Babe Ruth

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Revision 11 . . (edit) December 21, 2001 2:36 am by RjLesch
Revision 10 . . (edit) December 21, 2001 2:36 am by RjLesch
Revision 9 . . December 21, 2001 2:33 am by RjLesch [more on the Called Shot]
Revision 8 . . (edit) December 21, 2001 1:52 am by Gareth Owen
Revision 7 . . (edit) December 21, 2001 1:51 am by Gareth Owen
Revision 6 . . December 21, 2001 1:48 am by (logged).12.106.xxx [*added a bit on Babe Ruth's "called shot" in 1932 World Series]
Revision 5 . . December 20, 2001 2:12 am by RjLesch [*started a bio]
Revision 4 . . (edit) December 20, 2001 1:41 am by Gareth Owen
Revision 3 . . December 20, 2001 12:26 am by Gareth Owen
Revision 2 . . December 20, 2001 12:21 am by Gareth Owen [stubby (still)]
Revision 1 . . September 13, 2001 7:27 am by RjLesch
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff)

Changed: 18c18
In the 1932 World Series, with Ruth's Yankees playing the Chicago Cubs, Ruth hit one of the most famous home runs in baseball history, a ball which he appeared to "call" ahead of time. Charlie Root, the Cubs pitcher, angrily denied that Ruth had "called his shot" and pointed out that he would have brushed Ruth back from the plate had Ruth done anything of the kind.
Did Ruth Call His Shot? In Game Three of the 1932 World Series, with Ruth's Yankees playing the Chicago Cubs, Ruth hit one of the most famous home runs in baseball history, a ball which he appeared to "call" ahead of time. According to the version told by Ruth in a 1945 interview, he took the first two strikes, holding up one finger after the first ("That's one") and two after the second ("That's two"). He then said he pointed toward the outfield fence, and then hit the next pitch into the stands.

Changed: 20c20,24
But Root had an odd habit of turning slightly around between pitches and others at the game said that Root had simply missed the Babe's gesture.
There is no doubt Ruth hit the home run, his second of the game. (Lou Gehrig, the next batter, also homered -- "the thunder after the lightning", as one sportswriter put it.) What has been argued since is this: did Ruth really point to the fence?

Charlie Root, the Cubs pitcher, angrily denied that Ruth had "called his shot" and pointed out that he would have brushed Ruth back from the plate had Ruth done anything of the kind. (Root was, in fact, nicknamed "Chinski" for his tendency to throw at batters.) But Root had an odd habit of turning slightly around between pitches and others at the game said that Root had simply missed the Babe's gesture.

There is no official film of the home run, and of course no television videotape. A home movie taken by a fan in the stands is inconclusive.

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