Pittsburgh's Greatest Baseball Moment

On this date in 1960, Bill Mazeroski claimed his place in baseball history. Facing Ralph Terry of the Yankees in the bottom of the 9th home run of the seventh and deciding game of the World Series, he gave baseball a moment for the ages. A leadoff home run, a walk off 10-9 victory -- and Pittsburgh's first World Series Championship since 1925.
No surprise you'll find a statue of him capturing the sheer joy of his achivement outside the Buccos current home, PNC Park. A few feet away, a plaque sets the scene.
It also stands with the most unique games ever played. The lead had already changed three times when Maz stepped to the plate in the 9th. Despite a total of 19 runs and 24 hits, it was played in just 2 hours and 36 minutes. It remains the only World Series game without a single strikeout. And in the most lopsided series ever, where the Yankees won by blowouts of 16-3, 10-0 and 12-0, the Pirates had won the close ones -- including a one-run decision on a warm sunny Pittsburgh afternoon the day after Columbus Day in 1960.

(My images are from a July 2016 visit to Pittsburgh.)

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