This Great Game presents baseball history in 1960: Bill Mazeroski's famed walk-off World Series homer

Back in 1927, when the mighty New York Yankees swept the Pittsburgh Pirates in the World Series, they outhit them by 56 batting points, outscored them 23-10, and hit the Series’ only two home runs.
Thirty-three years later, when the two teams met again in the Fall Classic, the Yankees outhit the Bucs by 82 batting points, outscored them 55-27, and out-homered them 10-4.
Sweep repeated?
No. The Yankees lost in seven games.
It all looked great on paper for the Yanks in the 1960 World Series until the box scores were broken down game by game. While the Bronx Bombers fattened the stats by packing a destructive punch in three big blowouts, it was the Pirates who mastered the close games and tipped the balance in their favor with the most important statistic of all: Wins. And they would do it with legendary panache, climaxing one of the most bizarre and talked-about World Series ever played thanks to a quiet, amiable player whose defensive skills at second base were so brilliant, it’s almost a shame he would be best remembered for hitting one of baseball’s all-time greatest home runs.
When Bill Mazeroski signed on with the Pirates straight out of high school in 1954, he was considered just another cheap prospect in Branch Rickey’s latest attempt to turn a laughingstock organization into a powerhouse. Mazeroski wasn’t alone; Rickey was quietly harvesting a bumper crop of young players with the same philosophy he used 30 years earlier in St. Louis: Collect enough rocks and a few gems will emerge. Mazeroski was just one of hundreds who had a chance, nothing more.
Exiled from Brooklyn, Rickey was questioned by many outsiders who wondered if he had any talent-building magic left. He had remarkable success remaking both the St. Louis Cardinals and the Brooklyn Dodgers—one through the innovation of the farm system, the other through the innovation of racial integration. But once at Pittsburgh, Rickey had no new angle to exploit, only his reputation for superior scouting.
Rickey spent five years attempting to rebuild the Pirates, and by the time he left in 1955, it appeared he’d met with major failure. The team had finished last during four of those years, next-to-last in the other, and averaged over 100 losses a year. Along with Mazeroski, Rickey’s discoveries during his tenure—including shortstop Dick Groat, first baseman Dick Stuart, outfielder Bill Virdon and pitchers Bob Friend, Vern Law and Roy Face—initially gave Pirate fans little hope that the future would be any brighter. Even the one blue chip prospect Rickey had uncovered, a gifted Puerto Rican kid named Roberto Clemente, seemed too young and unrefined to make any immediate impact in Pittsburgh.
Once more, however, Rickey would get the last laugh, albeit in absentia. As Rickey would be responsible for supplying the genie in the bottle, it was manager Danny Murtaugh who got credit for finally letting it out.
Murtaugh took over for a beleaguered Bobby Bragan in 1957 and, almost as easily as flipping a switch, got the Pirates to power on. Under his reign, Murtaugh got the Bucs to close out 1957 by playing .500 ball—stop-the-press news given the Pirates’ cellar dwelling of the past decade—and uplifted them further to a second-place finish in 1958. They finished fourth in 1959 but were no less competitive, full of eye-opening personal achievements such as reliever Roy Face’s 18-1 record and starter Harvey Haddix’s famous 12-inning perfect game, which he lost in the 13th.
The 1959 trade for Haddix, along with third baseman Dick Hoak and catcher Smokey Burgess to Cincinnati for star slugger Frank Thomas and three lesser players, was considered the final piece of the promising championship puzzle at Pittsburgh. With a year under their belts together, the new and complete mix of Pirates entered 1960 thoroughly confident that they could seize the National League pennant. They weren’t about to disappoint their fans in realizing that assessment.
Solid and well-balanced in just about every facet of their game, the Pirates successfully glided through 1960, never slumping, never collapsing. They led the league in batting, earned run average, and fielding. Their clutch game resulted in 23 victories in their last at-bat. Vern Law earned the Cy Young Award with a career-high 20 wins against nine losses. Roberto Clemente, who for five years had shown only scant signs of potential greatness, finally came into his own with a .316 average, 16 home runs and 94 runs batted in. Starting pitcher Vinegar Bend Mizell and reliever Clem Labine made significant contributions after joining the team via mid-season trades. (Mizell was 13-5 in 23 starts for the Bucs; Labine won three, saved three, and produced a 1.50 ERA.) Even the bench came alive; when Dick Groat (Groat, who won the NL batting title at .325, would also win the league’s Most Valuable Player award.) went down with a broken wrist in the season’s final month, Dick Schofield filled in and batted nearly .400.
Though Bill Mazeroski was showing his usual brilliance at second base—teammates called him “No Hands” because his movements in turning a double play were so quick—his batting numbers were not cooperating. Stuck well below the .250 mark at mid-summer, Mazeroski received adjustment tips from batting coach (and Hall-of-Famer) George Sisler, who told him to be more patient at the plate. The advice worked, and Mazeroski headed into the postseason hitting .328 over the regular season’s final two months.
For their first return to the World Series in 33 years, the Pirates would meet up with their 1927 rival: The New York Yankees.
After stumbling the year before, the Yankees were back—but it took them a while to rev up. Another lackluster start and a two-week absence by 70-year old manager Casey Stengel (resting after a case of chest pains) suggested to many that the cracks in the Yankee mystique were deepening. Even Mickey Mantle was thrown into the fans’ doghouse after he failed to run out a double play while teammate Roger Maris hurt himself at second base trying to break it up. (Mantle, who thought there was two outs when he hit into the double play, atoned by cracking two of his AL-leading 40 home runs the next day.)
The Yankees eventually righted themselves and overcame the contenders of the day: Defending AL champ Chicago, showing more pop with the addition of Roy Sievers and once-and-current White Sox Minnie Minoso; and, more surprisingly, the Baltimore Orioles, buoyed by a starting rotation called the “Kiddie Corps,” so nicknamed since four of their starters were age 22 or younger. The Yankees emerged from a tight race in early September and, letting the Sox and Orioles know they weren’t looking back, won their last 15 games of the regular season to easily nab the AL pennant.
Yankee pitching was superb, and as always under Stengel, the wealth was shared, with Art Ditmar leading the team with just 15 wins. Offensively, the real sparkplug to New York’s overall renewal came from first-year Yankee Roger Maris; the former Kansas City Athletic slammed 39 home runs and led the AL in slugging percentage (.581) and RBIs (112). Maris barely edged out Mantle for the AL Most Valuable Player award; little did the voters realize what kind of encore Maris would have in store for them in 1961.
The Pittsburgh Pirates victoriously opened the World Series by putting an end to the Yankee 15-game win streak; Bill Mazeroski’s continued improvement at the plate paid off with a two-run bleacher shot midway through that helped decide a 6-4 win. The Yankees reacted to the loss more ticked off than impressed—promptly destroying the Pirates in Games Two and Three by scores of 16-3 and 10-0. The resulting momentum, added to the fact that the next two games were scheduled at Yankee Stadium, suddenly gave the Series all the assumed trappings of an early Pittsburgh surrender.
But revived Pirate pitching chewed both the momentum and the home field advantage apart. Starters Vern Law and Harvey Haddix sparked an unlikely turnaround by sedating the Yankee bats and winning Games Four and Five, respectively, by scores of 3-2 and 5-2. Mazeroski again was pivotal at the plate, doubling home the decisive run in Game Five.
Just like that, after being on the verge of annihilation, the Pirates were headed back to Forbes Field with two games to win one for the Series.
And all the Yankees did was to get mad again. Game Six set off another tirade of destruction by the Bronx Bombers, obliterating the Pirates 12-0 behind 17 hits and Whitey Ford’s second shutout of the Series. (The Pirates were shut out just four times during the entire regular season.)
Game Seven would become a microcosm of the entire Series to the moment—a classic and vicious seesaw battle, a contest seldom lost on baseball fans both hardcore and otherwise.
The Pirates sprinted out to a 4-0 lead after just two innings, and it stayed that way until the fifth when the Yankees received a solo home run from Bill Skowron. That was the murmur. The clang came in the sixth with four runs, capped by a towering home run from Yogi Berra that just stayed fair down the right field line. New York added apparent insurance with two runs in the eighth to extend their lead to 7-4.
The real drama was still to come, a drama that would accelerate with each half-inning.
After Gino Cimoli pinch-hit for Roy Face and singled to lead off the bottom of the eighth, signs of a Pirate rally looked to be on their way to extinction when the next batter, Bill Virdon, hit a double play grounder towards Yankee shortstop Tony Kubek. But the ball hopped wildly in front of Kubek, punching him square in the throat and knocking him back. (Kubek departed and was taken to the hospital with a bruised larynx.) Instead of two out and nobody on, the Pirates had two on and no one out. The Pirate rally had flared anew. And the Yankees would pay for it.
Both runners scored, two more got on base and two others were retired when back-up catcher Hal Smith—a one-time Yankee prospect—launched a three-run home run to climax a five-run rally and send the Bucs to the ninth, suddenly, with a 9-7 lead.
The Yanks fought back in the ninth. After Mickey Mantle singled to score one run and bring the tying run to third with one out, Berra hit what appeared to be the Series-ending double play to first baseman Rocky Nelson, who stepped on first for one out, then began to throw to second to nail Mantle—only to realize that Mantle was scrambling back to first. Nelson reacted too late and Mantle got back to first safely. While this frenzy took place, the tying run (pinch-runner Gil McDougald) scored.
The Pirates responded in the bottom of the ninth not with a massive rally but with a single stroke of the bat. Bill Mazeroski, the only batter in the lineup who didn’t hit in the five-run eighth, was the only batter the Bucs needed in the ninth. After taking the first pitch from Yankee pitcher Ralph Terry, Mazeroski swung and sent the next pitch over the ivied brick wall in left center to finish, perhaps, baseball’s most memorably wild game ever. Forbes Field erupted, and Mazeroski had to run the gauntlet of teammates, fans and police just to finish circling the bases.
As Pittsburgh celebrated into the Fall, turmoil brewed in New York.
An emerging contingent of Yankee players and management were growing tired of Casey Stengel, and so they played the age card to get rid of him. The Yankees’ unsuccessful, Jekyll/Hyde-like performance in the World Series was all the fodder they needed.
A bizarre press conference on October 18 began with Yankee co-owner Dan Topping announcing Stengel’s firing in a most congenial style, stating that Stengel was being given $160,000 “to do with as he pleases.” (Long-time Yankee General Manager George Weiss, age 74, was also released.) Stengel wrapped it up with typical Stengel charm: “I’ll never make the mistake of being 70 again.”
In 12 years, Casey Stengel had given the Yankees ten American League pennants and seven World Series championships. But for the Yankees, the song always remained the same: What have you done for us lately?
And if it wasn’t a World Series triumph, it wasn’t squat.