The World Series has produced many moments of incredible drama, but only in 1960 has the Fall Classic ended with a Game 7 home run. That World Series was among the wildest in baseball history as the New York Yankees outscored the Pittsburgh Pirates, 55-27, and second baseman Bobby Richardson won the Most Valuable Player award. It came in a losing cause, though, as Pittsburgh second baseman Bill Mazeroski authored an incredible conclusion to an unforgettable series.
The Pirates were huge underdogs against the dynastic New York Yankees, who had captured 16 World Series titles since Pittsburgh’s last title in 1925. While the Yankees occupied baseball’s penthouse, the Pirates languished in its basement. The perennial doormats were so downtrodden that Hollywood cast them as a major league team in need of divine intervention in the 1951 movie, “Angels in the Outfield.”
There was an inkling that 1960 might be different, however, after the Pirates trounced the Cincinnati Reds, 13-0, in their home opener, which included a Mazeroski home run to left-center field at Forbes Field. Throughout a magical, pennant-winning season, the Pirates demonstrated tremendous resilience. They won 21 of their 95 victories in their final at-bat, including a dozen with two outs. Pittsburgh native Dick Groat captured the National League Most Valuable Player Award with a league-leading .325 batting average, pitcher Vernon Law won the National League Cy Young Award and phenom Roberto Clemente made the first of his 15 All-Star Game appearances.
Through the first six games of the 1960 World Series, the Bronx Bombers lived up to their nickname by outscoring the Pirates, 46-17. But while New York routed Pittsburgh by scores of 16-3 (Game 2), 10-0 (Game 3) and 12-0 (Game 6), the Pirates won the closer games: 6-4 (Game 1), 3-2 (Game 4) and 5-2 (Game 5).
The 36,683 fans who filled Forbes Field for Game 7 on the afternoon of Thursday, October 13, 1960, basked in unseasonably warm temperatures and a fast start by the Pirates, who jumped to a 4-0 lead after two innings. Law blanked the Yankees until Bill Skowron’s fifth-inning home run. When the first two batters reached base in the sixth inning, Law was relieved by Roy Face, who had been stellar in saving all three of Pittsburgh’s victories in the series. He wouldn’t record a fourth.
After Yankees superstar Mickey Mantle singled to make the score 4-2, Yogi Berra blasted a three-run homer to put the Yankees ahead. New York plated two more runs in the eighth inning to make the score 7-4 and push the Pirates to the brink.