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#1
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1961 Topps # 406 Mantle Blasts 565 FT. Home Run. Was this "real" or "fake" News ? Is this where the ball hit the ground or where it stopped rolling ? Any news accounts of this event ?
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#2
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Not sure; however:
If a baseball took that trajectory and landed where the tip of the arrow is, and hit a hard surface like asphalt…it probably would have bounced and rolled for quite a distance after touchdown.
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Eric Perry Currently collecting: T206 (136/524) 1956 Topps Baseball (198/342) "You can observe a lot by just watching." - Yogi Berra |
#3
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According to Google:
On April 17, 1953, Mickey Mantle hit a towering home run at Washington D.C.'s Griffith Stadium that became known as the "tape-measure home run". The ball traveled over the left-center field wall, hit a beer sign 460 feet from home plate, and landed in the backyard of a house on Oakdale Street, where it was found by a 10-year-old boy. Yankees publicist Red Patterson estimated the home run's total distance at 565 feet, a figure that helped coin the legendary term. Details of the Blast The Hit: Mantle, batting right-handed against Senators pitcher Chuck Stobbs, hit a fastball. The Trajectory: The ball soared over the left-center field wall, cleared a 60-foot bleacher section, and grazed a beer advertisement. The Landing: It landed in the backyard of a house on Oakdale Street. The Estimator: Yankees publicist Red Patterson estimated the distance by walking from the back of the stadium bleachers to where the ball landed and consulting blueprints. The Discovery: A 10-year-old boy named Donald Dunaway found the ball in a backyard and eventually sold it to Red Patterson for a dollar. |
#4
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Wow, a whole dollar? Red Patterson comes off looking like a colossal douche here. While things didn't have the same value in those days, there was certainly still much publicity value to having the ball in hand for display purposes. Give the kid more than a dollar.
Last edited by BillyCoxDodgers3B; 08-27-2025 at 04:42 PM. |
#5
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Mark McGwire 260lbs of muscle full roids with better equipment and faster balls being pitched to him never hit one that far. 5'11" 195lbs Mantle never did either.
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#6
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Don't be so sure about that-Mickey was unlike any other.
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#7
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![]() Quote:
"Patterson gave the boy a dollar and later sent him five more dollars and two autographed baseballs in return for the home run ball. The ball and Mantle’s bat eventually made its way to Cooperstown." https://baseballhall.org/discover/in...-foot-home-run |
#8
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Mantle hit some colossal home runs. He missed by inches of being the only person to hit a ball out of Yankee Stadium. Was it 565 feet—who knows, but if anyone could hit it that far it was him.
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#9
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![]() Quote:
I suppose that was a bit better, but still comes off as being not enough, even for the era. How about some box seats at Griffith Stadium for the kid and his family the next time the two teams faced off? A meet and greet wouldn't have been out of the question, either. Good photo op material there for the club as well. I wonder if those balls had any clubhouse signatures on them, or if they were Autoballs! Last edited by BillyCoxDodgers3B; 08-28-2025 at 05:07 AM. |
#10
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It was real, and there were news accounts. Did it go that far, probably not, but it was the only ball to ever clear the stands in left field, where it was something like 410 to the fence and then the bleachers. No doubt a 500-footer, at any rate. Google will be your friend here.
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#11
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#12
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I have a competing theory, and believe the ball was hit much, much farther (or is it "further"), perhaps closer to 700 feet,
but it hit a house flushly and bounced back to the 565 foot spot in that kid's yard. ![]()
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#13
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Farther is used when discussing linear distance.
Hopefully, I've helped you further your understanding of the word. ![]()
__________________
Eric Perry Currently collecting: T206 (136/524) 1956 Topps Baseball (198/342) "You can observe a lot by just watching." - Yogi Berra |
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