18 episodes

Sportscaster Dan Lovallo looks back at the 1961 New York Yankees and their historic season, as Yankees teammates Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris chased the single season home run record of the iconic Babe Ruth.

Baseball Sixty One Dan Lovallo

    • Sports
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

Sportscaster Dan Lovallo looks back at the 1961 New York Yankees and their historic season, as Yankees teammates Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris chased the single season home run record of the iconic Babe Ruth.

    18. Maris does it in 162 as Yankees clinch

    18. Maris does it in 162 as Yankees clinch

    It was the home stretch of the 1961 season. The New York Yankees had widened their first place lead considerably over the Detroit Tigers. The nation, meanwhile, was still captivated by the chase of Babe Ruth's single-season mark home run. With Mickey Mantle injured, it was now his teammate Roger Maris vs. Babe Ruth. Even President John F. Kennedy was enthralled by the race.
    As for the pennant, the Yankees would clinch on the night Maris needed his 60th home run to tie Babe Ruth in 154 games. The World Series between the Yankees and Cincinnati Reds was almost an afterthought.
    I cover it all here in this final episode of the Baseball Sixty One podcast. I hope you enjoyed the podcast, as much as I enjoyed putting it together.

    • 29 min
    17. Yanks on a tear. Piersall attacked at Stadium

    17. Yanks on a tear. Piersall attacked at Stadium

    As the 1961 season was winding down, the New York Yankees went on a tear, reeling off 13 consecutive wins. Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris continued to hit home runs, but a disturbing incident at Yankee Stadium, highlighted a doubleheader between the Yankees and the Cleveland Indians.
    On Sep. 10, in the first game of a doubleheader, Indians outfielder Jimmy Piersall was attacked by two fans, but Piersall fought back. It was one of several incidents that highlighted a bizarre afternoon of baseball at the "big ballpark in the Bronx," as Yankees' broadcaster Red Barber used to refer to the Stadium.
    All this and more highlight the latest episode of my Baseball Sixty One podcast.

    • 25 min
    16. A nation is captivated and its on to Hollywood

    16. A nation is captivated and its on to Hollywood

    A nation had become captivated with the home run race between Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle, as the Yankee teammates tried to break Babe Ruth's single-season home run record in 154 games. Publications, even those not devoted to sports, started weighing in on the battle. Meanwhile, the Yankees surged into first place, but were still trying to fend off the Detroit Tigers, before a Labor Day weekend showdown series at Yankee Stadium.
    The race did have some lighter moments, namely Mantle, Maris and Yogi Berra heading to Hollywood.
    We cover it all, including the Dodgers nosedive in the National League, in this latest episode.

    • 28 min
    15. Williams predicts; M&M asked about edict

    15. Williams predicts; M&M asked about edict

    The home run race is full steam ahead for Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris, as the Yankees maintain their grip on first place. While appearing on broadcaster Red Barber’s Yankees pregame show, Mantle and Maris are asked about Commissioner Ford Frick’s edict that in order to break Babe Ruth’s single-season home run record they would have to do it within 154 games and not the new 162-game season.
    Recently retired slugger Ted Williams also makes a prediction about the home run race and the 1961 World Series winner. And to add even more fuel to the fire, Yankees manager Ralph Houk is fined and suspended for five games.
    All this and more are a part of this latest episode.

    • 21 min
    14. Frick spoils race. Mantle and Maris red-hot

    14. Frick spoils race. Mantle and Maris red-hot

    As the nation became riveted on the home run race between the Yankees's Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris to see if they would break Babe Ruth's single-season home run mark, commissioner Ford Frick tried to spoil the occasion. So much for marketing. Frick, who once was Ruth's ghost writer, said the record would have to be broken in 154 games - the length of the seasons when Ruth played - and not the expanded 162 game season. The decision did not sit well with Yankees manager Ralph Houk or the media.
    As for Mantle and Maris, they were surging as they moved well ahead of Ruth's pace, blasting one home run after another. Meanwhile, the Yankees and Tigers continued their torrid American League pennant race, while the Dodgers were giving the first place Reds a run for their money in the National League.

    • 29 min
    13. Wind highlights All-Star game

    13. Wind highlights All-Star game

    The Yankees were moving in and out of first place in their battle for the American League lead. Meanwhile, Roger Maris was hitting home runs at a record pace, surging two weeks ahead of Babe Ruth's record-setting pace. Mickey Mantle was also starting to hit home runs.
    But the story was the first of two All-Star games. In the American League-National League confrontation, the wind was so predominant at Candlestick Park in San Francisco, some American Leaguers vowed to never play there, if traded to the Giants.
    As for the Yankees, they began their road trip after the All-Star break, on a high note.

    • 20 min

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