Ernie Lombardi Only Slipped Up Once, World Series Game 2, October 5, 1939.
Listen now
Description
Bill James called him “the slowest man who played baseball,” yet his ten years with a batting average over .300 would make him attractive to any team. In his seventeen years, he was the first catcher to earn two NL Batting Awards. He finished with a career .306, but it was one lapse of concentration in Game 4 of the 1939 World Series he would be remembered for. Taking a hard-hit ball without a protective cup in the tenth inning left him dazed while the World Series winning run stole home. Rather than the fateful Game 4, let's step back a few days and remind ourselves that a World Series is more than a single play. Lombardi is still catching, Bucky Walters is his starting pitcher, and the game is in the oppressive and hostile Yankee Stadium. The classic team of Red Barber and Bob Elson are behind the microphone. You can find the boxscore here: https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/NYA/NYA193910050.shtml This game was played on October 5, 1939. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/classicbaseballradio/message
More Episodes
The New York Mets put up a strike-less game in the 2024 National League Championship game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. It's a rare feat, but even rare are both sides forgetting to get any strikes. That was the case in the pivotal Game 7 of the 1960 World Series. Naturally, everything is on...
Published 10/21/24
Published 10/21/24
MLB’s first three years of post-season action saw the Baltimore Orioles appear each year. In 1971, the Oakland Athletic appeared for the first time and would have their own consecutive run of five years, reaching the fall knockout. The Orioles had come out on top in 1969 and 1970, winning the...
Published 10/07/24