A defensive play made by Willie Mays in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series
This article is about the play by Willie Mays in the 1954 World Series. For other baseball plays referred to similarly, see The Catch (disambiguation) § Baseball.
Wertz worked the count to two balls and one strike before hitting Liddle's fourth pitch about 420 feet (130 m) to deep center field. In many stadiums, the ball would have been a home run, which would have given the Indians a 5–2 lead. However, the Polo Grounds center field was the deepest in the league, marked as 483 feet (147 m),[3][a] and Mays, who was playing in shallow center field, made an on-the-run, over-the-shoulder catch at the warning track for the out. Having caught the ball, he immediately spun and threw to second base. Doby, the runner on second, might have been able to score the go-ahead run had he tagged at the moment the ball was caught;[4] as it was, he ran when the ball was hit, then had to scramble back to tag. Mays' throw went to second base, holding Cleveland to runners at first and third with one out.[2]
Jack Brickhouse, calling the game for NBC television along with Russ Hodges, described Mays' catch to viewers. The audio has been published on CD with the 2000 book And the Fans Roared,[6] and also as accompaniment to the World Series film.
Brickhouse: There's a long drive... way back at center field... way back, back, it is a... Oh my! Caught by Mays![6]: 16 The runner on second, Doby, is able to go to third.[7] Willie Mays just brought this crowd to its feet with a catch which must have been an optical illusion to a lot of people![6]: 17 Boy! [pause] Notice where that 483 foot mark is in center field? The ball itself—Russ, you know this ballpark better than anyone else I know—had to go about 460,[b] didn't it?[8]
Hodges: It certainly did, and I don't see how Willie did it, but he's been doing it all year.[9]
Brickhouse: Willie Mays just made the catch of the day.[10]
There is some question of the depth of straight-away center field. Sometimes there was a 475[c] sign in center field, sometimes 483[d] (as was the case in 1954).[11] The ballpark was demolished in 1964, and it is unclear what was being measured when. One theory is that 475 was the distance to the front of the clubhouse overhang, and 483 was the distance to the rear wall under the overhang.[11] Regardless, the ball was not hit to the deepest part of center field; the spot where Mays made his catch is estimated by baseball researchers not to be more than 425 feet (130 m) from home plate.[12]
Aftermath and response
The play prevented the Indians from taking the lead and, in the bottom of the 10th, the Giants won the game on their way to sweeping the Series. The Catch is often considered to be one of the best and most memorable plays in the history of baseball because of the difficulty of the play, its importance in the game, and the importance of the game itself.[13] Bob Feller said both that it was a very good catch and: "We knew Willie had the ball all the way." Later, Feller said, "There's three things that made the catch memorable: one, it was a great play. Two, it was in a World Series. And three, it was on national television."
Mays himself did not believe "The Catch" to be the best defensive play he ever made.[14][15] In a 2006 CD collection, Ernie Harwell's Audio Scrapbook,[16] Mays talks about a running bare-handed catch he made at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh in 1951, after which the Giants' players teased the young rookie by treating him with complete indifference when he returned to the bench.[16] Mays also cited a catch he made against the center field wall at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, New York, in which he had to scurry back so fast he did not have time to turn around.[16]
In 2007, a physicist calculated that if the temperature had been 77 °F (25 °C) rather than 76 °F (24 °C), the ball would have traveled 2 inches (5.1 cm) farther than it did, and The Catch might not have been completed.[17][18]
Notes
^The center field measurement at the Polo Grounds was marked differently at different times; see discussion in the Broadcast section.
^Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Monte Irvin (1994). Baseball: Inning 7, the Capital of Baseball. Ken Burns. Event occurs at 84:35. Retrieved April 14, 2020 – via YouTube. I didn't think that he'd ever get to the ball, but he did; and then he had the presence of mind to wheel and throw the ball to second base to keep Larry Doby from scoring. Actually, if he'd have tagged up, he could have scored from second base, that's how far the ball was hit.
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