Not only did Ruth hit home runs in great numbers, but he hit them over vast distances. His ability to propel baseballs into the great beyond earned him dozens of colorful nicknames over the years, such as “The Mammoth of Maul,” “The Big Bam,” and the “Behemoth of Bust.” Some of Ruth’s longest homers are listed below:
--In 1917, Ruth became the first player to hit a ball into the centerfield bleachers at Fenway Park. The dimensions of the stadium were changed in later years, but in the early 1900s, the distance was well over 500 feet.
--During spring training in 1919, the Babe hit a
long blast in an exhibition game at Plant Field in Tampa, Florida. It landed on
the railing of a horse racing track that circled the stadium. Estimates of the
drive vary from 540-612 feet.
--During the 1919 regular season, Ruth reportedly
slammed a pitch over the right field roof at the Polo Grounds. Joe Jackson,
playing for Cleveland, was said to have hit the top of the roof in a 1913 game.
But Ruth’s shot allegedly cleared the roof on the fly.
--On July 18, 1921, the Babe went deep against Bert
Cole of the Tigers at Navin Field in Detroit. By some accounts, the ball hit a
parked car on Plum Street some 600 feet away then bounced/rolled another 250 feet.
Some sources consider this to be the longest verifiable home run in major
league history.
-- On July 31, 1921, the Babe launched a drive over
the right-centerfield roof at the Polo Grounds. The blast, surrendered by Ray
Caldwell of the Indians, was believed to be around 560 feet.
--During a 1926 barnstorming stop at Artillery Park
in Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, the Babe challenged a local pitcher to throw him
his best fastball. Ruth blasted the pitch out of the stadium and beyond an
adjacent a running track. Estimates of the distance vary from 600-650
feet.
--In a 1929 exhibition game at Sing Sing
Correctional Facility, Ruth hit a ball over the centerfield wall. It sailed
past a watchtower and traveled around 620 feet. Prior to then, no ball had ever
exited the stadium by way of centerfield.
--In a 1934 spring training game at St. Petersburg,
the Babe drilled an offering from Huck Betts of the Braves out of Waterfront
Park and onto the second story porch of the West Coast Inn, where players were
staying. That shot is believed to have carried at least 610 feet—probably even
further.
--The last homer of Ruth’s career was a memorable
one. It came off of Guy Bush of the Pirates at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh. It
hit a house on Bouquet Street roughly 540 feet away. Some sources claim the
blast was closer to 600 feet.
During
the 1950s and ‘60s, Mickey Mantle assumed the title of baseball’s most powerful
long-distance slugger. During his 18-year career, “The Mick” hit at least 10
home runs that were estimated to have traveled in excess of 500 feet. This
included a colossal drive that hit the façade at old Yankee Stadium and bounced
back onto the field. The façade was
located 370 feet from home plate and over a hundred feet above the field.
Mathematical estimates placed Mantle’s epic blast at around 734 feet (though
the measurement is hypothetical).
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