Pirates beat Yankees for the first time since game 7 of 1960 World Series.

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PITTSBURGH (AP)—For one night, it was 1960 all over again for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Jose Bautista and Ryan Doumit homered and the Pirates turned back the clock nearly a half-century, beating the New York Yankees 12-5 on Tuesday night for their first victory against them since Bill Mazeroski’s historic homer decided the ‘60 World Series.

The Pirates had been the only team in the majors to not beat the Yankees in a regular-season game, getting outscored 49-19 while losing six in a row against them in 2005 and 2007. Until Tuesday, the Yankees hadn’t played a game that counted in Pittsburgh since 1960.

“It was perfect,” Jason Bay said. “We got a lot of hits, scored a lot of runs, had a great crowd. That was a blast.”

Hall of Famer Mazeroski threw out the ceremonial first pitch to commemorate the only homer to end a World Series Game 7, and the Pirates took it from there by opening a 7-1 lead in the fifth. They finished with 19 hits, nine for extra bases.

And the Pirates’ first homer against the Yankees in Pittsburgh since No. 9 Mazeroski’s famous shot? Bautista, who wears No. 19, hit a two-run drive in the fourth—coincidentally, Bautista’s ninth homer.

Playing before only their second home sellout this season, the Pirates enjoyed the same kind of setting the Yankees experience nightly in Yankee Stadium.

“There was no special pixie dust for this one,” manager John Russell said. “But it was a great night. The fans were into it, they had a lot of fun and the players fed off that.”

Bay, who doubled twice, hasn’t seen such PNC Park so lively since the 2006 All-Star Game. Jack Wilson, who has played all eight seasons in the ballpark, thinks it may have been the best crowd he’s seen there.

“It was a different atmosphere,” Bay said. “That doesn’t happen here a lot and it was pretty neat to play in.”

Ripping a page from history—the Pirates scored six runs in the final two innings to rally and win 10-9 in that ‘60 Game 7—they scored twice in the first against Darrell Rasner (4-5). Rasner lost his fifth in six decisions by giving up seven runs in five innings.

Nate McLouth doubled and scored on Freddy Sanchez’s bloop single to start the first. Sanchez moved to second on the play when new left fielder Justin Christian fumbled the ball for an error, and Adam LaRoche added a two-out RBI single.

Doumit, back from a five-game layoff with a possible concussion, hit his 10th homer in the fifth and LaRoche followed with only his third career triple before scoring on Rasner’s second wild pitch of the game, making it 7-1.

“I need to forget this start,” Rasner said.

The Yankees are 120-84 in interleague play to the Pirates’ major league-worst 61-100, yet still lost their third in four games against a below-.500 NL Central team. They dropped two of the three against the Reds last weekend.

“We couldn’t get that one big inning, and they were hitting literally from the first pitch of the game,” said Derek Jeter, pointing to the Yankees’ 2-for-11 performance with runners in scoring position.

Pirates left-hander Tom Gorzelanny (6-6) walked five and gave up six hits despite throwing only 47 of 99 pitches for strikes in six innings, but still won for the second time in six starts.

The Yankees, who had won eight of 10 and 13 of 18, were without offensive catalyst Johnny Damon because of a sore left foot so they called up the 28-year-old Christian, who had two hits and drove in two runs in his first career game.

“I felt we stunk,” manager Joe Girardi said. “It’s one thing to lose 2-1 and guys shut you down. We had a lot of opportunities, our defense didn’t help us, our hitting with runners in scoring position didn’t help us—a lot of factors went into this game, where you get pounded,”

Robinson Cano had three hits, including a single in the second that was the Yankees’ first hit in Pittsburgh since Mickey Mantle’s ninth-inning single in Game 7. Bobby Abreu hit a two-run homer, his ninth, in the ninth.
The Pirates, despite being three games below .500 in what could be a 16th consecutive losing season, are 24-16 at home.

“Every time we seem to have a (big crowd), we end up playing well,” Wilson said. “Everybody knows this is a sports town, and they would go crazy if the Pirates were in some sort of race at the end.”

Yahoo Sports.com
 

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Bill Mazerowski scores winning run in bottom 9th Gm 7 of 1960 World Series.

07.jpg



Approximately 48 years later the Pirates win another games against the Yankees last night. Where are the Pirate fans on this forum?


wil..
 

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In 1960 Pittsburgh was a downtrodden, polluted and economically depressed town with very little to cheer about. I was 11 yrs. old and the final game of the WS was so important to us that the Administration dragged a big old B+W console TV onto the auditorium stage so the entire school could watch it. When Maz hit that ball it seemed like the only reason it carried over the wall was from the collective prayers of the city. The emotions we felt were so powerful they were comparable to something like the end of WWII. 48 years later it remains one of the fondest memories of my life.
 

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Zorba

I remember skipping school to watch the game at home. We had a black and white console. I was 12 years old and was rooting for the Yankees and was crushed when Maz hit that home off 1962 World Series star Ralph Terry.

Looking at that photo I remember some of the players and a bunch more not shown with their numbers if I remember them right.

Numbers on left.
9 (can't see it) Bill Mazeroski BTW. to this day Mazeroski has the only Game 7 walk-off homer in World Series history. Joe Carter's walk off homer in the 93 series was a game six job.

Players in photo:
16 - Gene Baker
40 - Manager Danny Murtaugh
4 - Bob Skinner
42 - Mickey Vernon
41 - probably a coach
21 - in front hatless Roberto Clemente

Other notables not shown, numbers on right, not 100% sure they are right:

Vinegar Bend Mizel -30
Bill Virdon - 18
Dick Groat - 24
Vern Law - 32 (winner of games 1 and 4)
Bob Friend - 19
Roy Face - 26
Harvey Haddix - 31 (winner of games 5 and 7)
Don Hoak - 12
Rockey Nelson - 14
Dick Schofield - 11

Oddity - MVP of the series was Yankee 2nd baseman Bobby Richardson. To this day Richardson is the only player from a losing team to win MVP of a World Series.



wil.
 
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PITTSBURGH (AP)—For one night, it was 1960 all over again for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Jose Bautista and Ryan Doumit homered and the Pirates turned back the clock nearly a half-century, beating the New York Yankees 12-5 on Tuesday night for their first victory against them since Bill Mazeroski’s historic homer decided the ‘60 World Series.

The Pirates had been the only team in the majors to not beat the Yankees in a regular-season game, getting outscored 49-19 while losing six in a row against them in 2005 and 2007. Until Tuesday, the Yankees hadn’t played a game that counted in Pittsburgh since 1960.

“It was perfect,” Jason Bay said. “We got a lot of hits, scored a lot of runs, had a great crowd. That was a blast.”

Hall of Famer Mazeroski threw out the ceremonial first pitch to commemorate the only homer to end a World Series Game 7, and the Pirates took it from there by opening a 7-1 lead in the fifth. They finished with 19 hits, nine for extra bases.

And the Pirates’ first homer against the Yankees in Pittsburgh since No. 9 Mazeroski’s famous shot? Bautista, who wears No. 19, hit a two-run drive in the fourth—coincidentally, Bautista’s ninth homer.

Playing before only their second home sellout this season, the Pirates enjoyed the same kind of setting the Yankees experience nightly in Yankee Stadium.

“There was no special pixie dust for this one,” manager John Russell said. “But it was a great night. The fans were into it, they had a lot of fun and the players fed off that.”

Bay, who doubled twice, hasn’t seen such PNC Park so lively since the 2006 All-Star Game. Jack Wilson, who has played all eight seasons in the ballpark, thinks it may have been the best crowd he’s seen there.

“It was a different atmosphere,” Bay said. “That doesn’t happen here a lot and it was pretty neat to play in.”

Ripping a page from history—the Pirates scored six runs in the final two innings to rally and win 10-9 in that ‘60 Game 7—they scored twice in the first against Darrell Rasner (4-5). Rasner lost his fifth in six decisions by giving up seven runs in five innings.

Nate McLouth doubled and scored on Freddy Sanchez’s bloop single to start the first. Sanchez moved to second on the play when new left fielder Justin Christian fumbled the ball for an error, and Adam LaRoche added a two-out RBI single.

Doumit, back from a five-game layoff with a possible concussion, hit his 10th homer in the fifth and LaRoche followed with only his third career triple before scoring on Rasner’s second wild pitch of the game, making it 7-1.

“I need to forget this start,” Rasner said.

The Yankees are 120-84 in interleague play to the Pirates’ major league-worst 61-100, yet still lost their third in four games against a below-.500 NL Central team. They dropped two of the three against the Reds last weekend.

“We couldn’t get that one big inning, and they were hitting literally from the first pitch of the game,” said Derek Jeter, pointing to the Yankees’ 2-for-11 performance with runners in scoring position.

Pirates left-hander Tom Gorzelanny (6-6) walked five and gave up six hits despite throwing only 47 of 99 pitches for strikes in six innings, but still won for the second time in six starts.

The Yankees, who had won eight of 10 and 13 of 18, were without offensive catalyst Johnny Damon because of a sore left foot so they called up the 28-year-old Christian, who had two hits and drove in two runs in his first career game.

“I felt we stunk,” manager Joe Girardi said. “It’s one thing to lose 2-1 and guys shut you down. We had a lot of opportunities, our defense didn’t help us, our hitting with runners in scoring position didn’t help us—a lot of factors went into this game, where you get pounded,”

Robinson Cano had three hits, including a single in the second that was the Yankees’ first hit in Pittsburgh since Mickey Mantle’s ninth-inning single in Game 7. Bobby Abreu hit a two-run homer, his ninth, in the ninth.
The Pirates, despite being three games below .500 in what could be a 16th consecutive losing season, are 24-16 at home.

“Every time we seem to have a (big crowd), we end up playing well,” Wilson said. “Everybody knows this is a sports town, and they would go crazy if the Pirates were in some sort of race at the end.”

Yahoo Sports.com

#1...Uhhhh, not tonight. I was at game. Standing room only sellout!

and

#2...You have a big crowd because the out of town team brings over 50% of the crowd! PNC was rocking tonight!!!!!................with all Yankees cheers!
 

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The Pirates might have kept it closer than the 10-3 pounding the Yanks gave the Red Sox today.
 

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I was three years old and visiting my grandparents in Pittsburgh during the series. My parents tell me we were at the same restaurant as bunch of Yankees, including Whitey Ford and Mickey Mantle. They said they had me stand on our table and yell "Let's Go Bucs" at the top of my lungs. Upon hearing this, Ford asked my parents to please control their child.

I've been a die-hard Pirates fan all my life and these past 16 years have been pure misery.
 

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I was in third grade when my father let me take his Phillips transistor radio to school. This was before sports pagers. :nohead:
 
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I was nine when I saw the home run in black and white...

Bellyputter...used that same Phillips transistor radio with the ear plug for those west coast games involving the Phillie's west coast trips....
 
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My father told me about that game many times when I was a kid. He was a big fan for the Pirates because of southern good ole boy Dick Groat.
 

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Unfortunately NYY Got Even This Wk

That trade was a joke!! 2 guys that will help the NYY where needed for zilch. Seems like the old Phil Athletics giveaways all over again. Boy could my Twins could have used that RH bat between M&M. And they have a hell of a lot more to give in return. Wil are you old enough to remember the "shot heard around the world"?
 

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Wil, I Was Overseas @ The Time

Sitting around listening to AF Radio, w/a bunch of Dodger fans. I loved the RSox (Teddy Ballgame) & the "Gints", Willie had played in their 3A tm in Mpls.! Won a few $$ & some BS, fun days.
 

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For the record

This thread was a memorabilia thread and a tribute to the Pittsburg Pirates of 1960 and not a knock on the Yankees. The reason it was bumped should not take away from the greatest victory in the history of a over 100 year old franchise.

At the time, I was a huge Yankee fan because I was an American league fan being born and raised in Boston. In those days fans from towns like Boston, Baltimore, Detroit etc were forced to root for the Yankees in the world series every year if you wanted to stay true to your league.

As a kid growing up in the 50s' and early 60s during the season I was a Red Sox fan starting around the year 1956 (8 years old) but in the post season (just the WS in those days) I rooted for the Yankees because I had no choice except in the year 1959 and was devastated when Maz hit that homer which I watched in my living room on a black and white console, I think it was a Magnavox, where the only TV of the house was located.

I remember skipping school to watch the entire series because back then TV did not control baseball like it does today and they actually played the WS at 2PM EDT starting times.

I remember the 56 series (the Larsen perfect game series) Yanks won, the 57 series, I was crushed when the Milwaukee Braves behind Lew Burdette beat the Yanks in 7 games, the 58 series when the Yanks returned the favor and won in seven against those same Milwaukee Braves let by the great Hank Aaron. That was the golden era for baseball in Milwaukee. 1959 was strange as the Chicago White Sox managed to have a great season using pitching and defense to win the AL pennant but lost in 6 games to the new Los Angeles Dodgers (moved from Brooklyn two years earlier).

Then came the Maz miracle shot in 1960's game seven. The best team the Yanks ever fielded in that era were the 1961 Bronx Bombers who crushed the Cincinnati Reds in five games, that was the Mantle - Maris team.

The 1962 series was a great battle between the Yanks and the by now San Francisco Giants led by the immortal Willie Mays. Ralph Terry (who gave up Maz's homer two years earlier) won game 7 in Candlestick park 1-0 when Willie McCovey lined out to Bobby Richardson at 2nd to end the game with Mays after hitting a wind blown double and stealing third base representing the tieng run standing on third. Being played on the west coast that game ended late in the afternoon back East and I remember having to argue with now home from where ever family members to watch the last few innings. The liner to Richardson was according to McCovey the hardest ball he ever hit in his long HOF career but the sinking liner went right to a perfectly positioned Richardson.

Oddity in that game: Ralph Terry pitched no hit ball until the bottom of the sixth when of all people Giant right hander and loser of the game Jack Sanford singled.

Another oddity: That game is to this day the only WS winning game where the winning run was not scored as a result of an RBI. Yankee SS Tony Kubek hit into a double play in the fifth inning with Bill Skowron scoring from third for the game's only run. The Giants went for the DP rather than trying to cut down the slow moving Moose who scored from third.

Then the Yanks went into a WS slump, getting swept by the Dodgers and Sandy Kaufax in 1963 and losing in 7 to the Bob Gibson led Cards in 1964. They would not return to the WS until 1976 when they were swept by The Big Red Machine (another thread bumped today to announce the score of today's Yanks/Red Sox game - go figure) I wrote the thread to give younger posters an idea about how awesome the Big Red Machine was in 1976, not to demean the Yankees.

Why is he writing this no big deal information you say..

Just a little baseball nostalgia - those first four Reds wins are from The 1976 World Series when "The Big Red Machine" swept the Yankees four straight to win their second straight World Series

http://www.therxforum.com/showthread.php?t=593394

To be honest by the time I came back from overseas in 1971 I had grown up and started to root solely for the team I had money on to win baseball games. Did I want the Red Sox to win on Saturday sure, but I didn't move any threads or post a single word about the game until this morning.

I enjoy writing threads about the great teams of the past in all four major US sports. I write them from a nostalgia point of view and not to bad mouth the losing team or their fans.


wil.
 
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Where Taconite Is Just A Low Grade Ore
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Wil I Too Love Nostalgia

My first love w/sports started w/the 1946 Army tm, of Doc & Glen. Sitting in my front rm on Sat. afternoon listening to Harry Wismer broadcast every game of that 46 season. Doc got hurt in the OU gm and was not right when they played Lujack & ND to a 0-0 tie. That was also the year I discovered "Teddy Ballgame", the greatest hitter who ever lived. Just think what he lost giving 5+ yrs to his country. Curt Gowdy once said "Imagine, being THE best hitter, a jet pilot, world championship fisherman"? That was Williams, he was what John Wayne wishes he were!" Also the REAL Lakers, Mpls that is. Ever see any lakes in LA? Big George, Mik, Jumping Jim. Almost as much fun as remembering all the little Mn. blondes of my youth.
 

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