The World Series 1947 Game Four starter for the Yankees before 33,443 frenzied fans at Ebbets Field was an unlikely choice - Bill Bevens. The 31-year-old right-hander had lost 13 of 20 decisions during the regular season.
His record could have been a lot better had he not walked 77 in 165 innings. His luck was a lot better in the World Series start - or so it seemed.
Going into the ninth inning, Bevens had a 2-1 lead. Much more important - he was pitching a no-hitter. Sure he was tired, he had thrown a lot of pitches, going deep in the count with quite a few batters.
Brooklyn catcher Bruce Edwards hit a high fly ball for the first out in the 9th. Then Bevens, laboring, walked Carl Furillo. It was his ninth walk of the game. Spider Jorgensen fouled out, weakly. Just one more out and the first World Series no-hitter was sealed.
Then, in Dodger broadcaster Red Barber's phrase, "the wheels were turning. Speedy pinch-runner Al Gionfriddo came in for Furillo. A gimpy "Pistol Pete" Reiser hit for relief pitcher, Hugh Casey. With the count 3-1 on Reiser, Gionfriddo stole second base. Bevens intentionally walked Reiser, his tenth walk of the game. Eddie Miksis came in to run for Reiser. The Dodgers now had two very fast runners on base.
Eddie Stanky, headed for the plate, but Dodger manager Burt Shotton pulled him and sent in veteran Harry Arthur "Cookie" Lavagetto as a pinch-hitter.
Pitch number 136 from Bevens was a swing and a miss by Lavagetto. The next pitch, one pitch too many, was slightly off the plate. Lavagetto was late on it.
"The pitch was right out there and I got hold of it good," said Lavagetto. Line drive toward the right field wall. Tommy Henrich, in front of the scoreboard in right-centerfield, watched as the ball struck high, near the center of the Gem Razorblade sign. It bounced around and Henrich finally picked it up, turned, threw.
"I ran down to first base," Lavagetto said, "and turned and saw the two runs scoring and that's all there was to it."
"Friends," Red Barber said, "they're killin' Lavagetto... his own teammates... they're beatin' him to pieces and it's taking a police escort to get Lavagetto away from the Dodgers!"
The two-out double not only broke up the Bill Bevens' no-hitter; it also pinned the loss on the Yankee hurler and tied the series at two games each. Ironically, goat Bevens and hero Lavagetto would never again wear a major league uniform after the 1947 World Series.
» Harvey Frommer is the author of 33 sports books, including "The New York Yankee Encyclopedia,” "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," "Growing Up Baseball" with Frederic J. Frommer, "Rickey and Robinson: The Men Who Broke Baseball's Color Line" and "A Yankee Century: A Celebration of the First Hundred Years of Baseball's Greatest Team."
Also by Harvey Frommer
» The Called Shot: October 1, 1932
» World Series: An Opinionated Chronicle: Sports Book Review
» The Eleven-Walk Inning: September 11, 1949
» Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville: Sports Book Review
» Albert Pujols, Meet Joe DiMaggio!
» "Moneyball" and Other Worthy Baseball Books: Sports Book Review
» Something to Write Home About : Sports Book Review
» The Double No-Hitter: Vandy's Masterpiece
» Me and My Dad: A Baseball Memoir: Sports Book Review
» Bucky Dent's Home Run: October 2, 1978
» The Ballpark Book : Sports Book Review
» "Pride of October", Bill Madden's Gem: Sports Book Review
» The Two Rogers: Kahn and Angell on Baseball : Sports Book Review
» "Baseball Timeline" and "Baseball Desk Reference": Sports Book Review
» Shut Out: A Story of Race and Baseball in Boston: Sports Book Review
» Al Gionfriddo's Catch
» David Wells' Perfect Game: May 17, 1998
» Yankee Talk: A Sampler
» "Spring Training" is Here: Sports Book Review
» The Men who Broke Baseball's Color Line: Excerpt from Harvey Frommer's "Rickey and Robinson"
» Books on Ballparks and other Baseball Matters: Sports Book Review
» The Golden Voices of Baseball: Sports Book Review
» By The Numbers: A New York Yankees Sampler
» Super Hot Stove League Reading: Sports Book Review
» The First Yankee Home Game: April 30, 1903
» The Most Memorable Moments in Major League Baseball History: Sports Book Review
» Bravo, Nolan Ryan!
» Johnny Vander Meer's Back-to-Back No-Hitters
» October's Baseball Books: Sports Book Review
» New York City Baseball: Once Upon A Time
» The Big Train: Walter Johnson, Baseball Immortal
» Baseball's Best Shots: Sports Book Review
» Wee Willie Keeler: Good Things Come in Small Packages
» Let's Play Two
» The First World Series
» Sandy Koufax, Out of Brooklyn: Sports Book Review
» The 1919 Black Sox (Part II)
» The 1919 Black Sox (Part I)
» Baseball Books On Parade: Sports Book Review
» Yankee Doodle Dandies: Yankee Books: Sports Book Review
» The Harmonica Incident: August 20, 1964
» "Fenway: A Biography in Words and Pictures": Sports Book Review
» Baseball's Mecca: The Hall of Fame in Cooperstown
» Trade a Player a Year Too Early, Not a Year Too Late
» The Yankee Mystique
» Satchel Paige: World's Greatest Pitcher
» "Red Smith on Baseball": Sports Book Review
» The Barry Halper Collection of Baseball Memorabilia: Sports Book Review
» Branch Rickey and Jackie Robinson
» Remembering Irving Rudd
» Subway Series
» Midsummer Classic: Midsummer Mockery
» Yankee Stadium's First Opening Day
» The Birth of Baseball's First Professional Team
» Yankee Stadium's First Opening Day
» Gehrig's Streak
» Willie Mays and the Month of May
» Reese was no Pee Wee
» Yankees vs. Red Sox: Baseball's Greatest Rivalry
» Celebrating Hank Greenberg
» Bobby Thomson's Famous Homer Lives On
» Remembering the Yankee Clipper: Joe DiMaggio
» Shoeless Joe Remains a Scapegoat
» The Mets Have Always Been Amazing
» More submissions
Copyright © 2003 by Harvey Frommer. Posted October 3, 2003.