THE TED WILLIAMS ERA COMES
TO A DRAMATIC END ...
Ted says farewell with a home run

September 28, 1960 ... Ted Williams ended his illustrious career with one swing of his bat, by blasting his 521st final home run into the Red Sox bullpen. It happened in the eighth inning. With the count 1-1, Jack Fisher fired a fastball that Ted launched high and deep. It landed on the canopy that protects the Sox pitchers in the bullpen. He crossed the plate and ran directly into the dugout with his head down and didn't acknowledge the fans.

For four minutes, they screamed for him to come out and take a bow, but he didn't move. When the inning ended, Mike Higgins made him go out and take his position in left field. As he got there, Carroll Hardy was running right behind him, trotting out to take his place. Ted turned around, saw Hardy, came back and crossed the infield for the final time and then disappeared down the runway to the Sox clubhouse.

The Sox had taken an early lead. In the bottom of the first inning, Steve Barber walked both Willie Tasby and Ted. Then he hit Jim Pagliaroni with a pitch and the bases were loaded. Barber's wildness continued as he uncorked a wild pitch that let Tasby jog across the plate. After he walked Frank Malzone, Fisher was brought in to pitch and Lou Clinton's sacrifice fly brought in another run. The Sox enjoyed a 2-0 lead.

Fisher did a great job and held down the Sox batters until Ted's home run in the eighth. The Orioles hitters, meanwhile, got to Sox starter Billy Muffett and took the lead. In the second inning, after Jim Gentile singled, Gus Triandos homered to tie the game. In the fifth, the O's took the lead on a sacrifice fly. And in the eighth with two men on, Gene Woodling's ground ball out, with runners at the corners, brought home the their fourth run.

With Baltimore leading, 4-2, Ted's home run got the Sox to within one run. Then in the ninth inning, with one out, rookie Marlan Coughtry beat out an infield hit. Vic Wertz came up to pinch hit and lined a double off the wall, putting Coughtry on third base. Tom Brewer came in to run for Wertz and Pumpsie Green was intentionally passed to fill the bases. That brought up Tasby, who hit a made-to-order doubleplay grounder to Brooks Robinson at third that would have ended the game. But Pumpsie slid hard into second and Billy Klaus threw the ball away, letting Coughtry and Brewer score the tying and winning runs.

Overshadowed was Mike Fornieles, who made his 70th appearance of the season and blanked Baltimore for two innings, picking up his 10th win of the season.

 

     

 

F   E   N   W   A   Y     P   A   R   K

 

 

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

 

R

H

E

 
 

BALTIMORE ORIOLES

0

2

0

0

1

1

0

0

0

 

 

4

9

1

 
 

BOSTON RED SOX

2

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

2

 

 

5

6

1

 

 

W-Mike Fornieles (10-5)
L-Jack Fisher (12-11)
Attendance: 10,454

 2B-Wertz (Bost), Stephens (Balt), Robinson (Balt)

 HR-Williams (Bost), Triandos (Balt)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

AB

R

H

AVG

 

 

Pumpsie Green ss 3 0 0 .229  

 

Willie Tasby cf 4 1 0 .268  

 

Ted Williams lf 3 2 1 .316  

 

Carroll Hardy lf 0 0 0 .229  

 

Jim Pagliaroni c 3 0 2 .333  

 

Frank Malzone 3b 3 0 0 .273  

 

Lou Clinton rf 3 0 0 .227  

 

Don Gile 1b 4 0 0 .174  

 

Marlan Coughtry 2b 3 1 2 .214  

 

Billy Muffett p 2 0 0 .268  

 

Russ Nixon ph 1 0 0 .283  

 

Mike Fornieles p 0 0 0 .400  

 

Vic Wertz ph 1 0 1 .282  

 

Tom Brewer pr 0 1 0 .194  
               
    IP H ER BB SO  

 

Billy Muffett 7 9 4 0 4  

 

Mike Fornieles 2 0 0 0 2  

 

 

         

 

 

 

1960 AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDINGS

 

 

New York Yankees 94 57 -

 

 

Baltimore Orioles 87 65 7 12

 

 

Chicago White Sox 86 55 8

 

 

Cleveland Indians 74 77 20

 

 

Washington Senators 73 79 21 1/2

 

 

Detroit Tigers 69 82 25

 

 

BOSTON RED SOX 65 86 29

 

 

Kansas City Athletics 57 94 37