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Joe Dimaggio's 56
Game Hitting Streak Began May 15, 1941
It was truly remarkable - a hit every game for two
months, from May 15 through July 17, 1941 in Yankee wins and defeats, in
games played in the daytime and those played at night. Single games,
doubleheaders, meaningless games and ones that really counted - - Joe
DiMaggio was locked in for 56 straight. And what made the epic feat even
more dramatic was that it took place in the summer of '41, a time America
was locked into news of the triumphs and tragedies of World War II.
The Yankee Clipper started the 1941 season slumping. He managed a single
in four at bats on May 15 against Edgar Smith in a game the Yankees lost
to the White Sox, 3-1.
On May 24 in his final at bat of the game against the Red Sox, DiMaggio
singled in two runs. He had a modest ten game hitting streak, but hardly
anyone paid it any attention. On May 30th the Yankee centerfielder made
three errors in the second game of a double header. He was pressing. In
the fifth inning, his fly ball to right was lost in the sun by Boston
outfielder Pete Fox. DiMag, credited with a hit, had pushed the streak
to 16.
Hits in both games of a doubleheader on June 1 against the Indians moved
the streak to 18. It was at 19 the next day, the day Lou Gehrig died. The
American League record set by George Sisler of 41 straight seemed out of
reach. But there was lots of speculation in the newspapers and on the
radio.
"That's when I became conscious of the streak," DiMaggio said. "But at
that stage I didn't think too much about it.
Newspaper and radio began to dramatize what Joe DiMaggio was doing. Most
games then were played in the afternoon, and radio announcers would
routinely interrupt programs with the news of the Yankee Clipper's
progress. Day and night, Les Brown band's recording was played by radio
disc jockeys:
"Who started baseball's famous streak/That's got us all aglow/He's just a
man and not a freak/Jolting Joe DiMaggio/Joe. . . Joe. . .DiMaggio/We want
you on our side/From Coast to Coast, that's all you hear/Of Joe the
One-Man Show/He's glorified the horsehide sphere/Jolting Joe DiMaggio/Joe
. . Joe. . .DiMaggio/We want you on our side/He'll live in baseball's Hall
of Fame/He got there blow-by-blow/Our kids will tell their kids his
name/Jolting Joe DiMaggio."
On June 17, official scorer Dan Daniel credited DiMaggio with a hit. His
grounder to short bounced up and hit Chicago's Luke Appling on the
shoulder. The streak stood at 30. The George Sisler American League
consecutive-game hit record of 41 was in reach.
On June 29, DiMaggio singled off Washington knuckleballer Dutch Leonard in
the first game of a doubleheader. A seventh-inning single off Walt
Masterson in the second game set a new record. - - 42. The taciturn
DiMaggio became America's most famous athlete, pestered by the media,
ogled by fans, adored by his Yankee teammates.
Before 52,832 at Yankee Stadium on July 1, DiMag paced a doubleheader
sweep of Boston. The Yankee Clipper rapped out two hits in the first
game. The nightcap was called after 5 innings but DiMaggio got a hit and
tied the 43-year-old major league record of 44 set by Willie Keeler.
The next day DiMag moved the streak to 45, homering off Dick Newsome of
the Sox.
Even the All Star Game did not stop Joe DiMaggio's streak. "I doubled,"
the Clipper smiled remembering the time, "and (brother) Dom drove me in
with a single."
The 16th of July saw the Yankees in Cleveland for the start of a series
with the Indians. 56!! Joe Di stroked a first inning single. The crowd at
vast Municipal Stadium cheered.
On July 17, 1941, DiMag and Lefty Gomez were headed in a cab to the
ballpark in Cleveland. "I've got a feeling that if you don't get a hit
your first time up tonight," the cabby told him, "they're going to stop
you."
"Who the hell are you?" Gomez snapped at the cabby. "What are you trying
to do, jinx him?" Before 67,468 - 40,000 of whom had purchased their
tickets some time in advance - veteran left-hander Al Smith took the mound
for Cleveland. It was not the Indians the throng came out to see. It was
Joltin' Joe DiMaggio.
Inning one, DiMaggio slashed a 1-0 pitch past third base but Ken Keltner,
playing deep, backhanded the ball, fired to first. Out! DiMag was walked
in the fourth inning.
The intense Yankee came to bat in the seventh inning lusting to extend the
streak. Almost deafening was the noise level in the huge ballpark. A shot
to third, a pickup by Keltner. DiMaggio out at first base.
The bases were loaded in the eighth inning, and there was one out when the
Yankee Clipper came up displaying no emotion. But there was plenty in the
rocking, rowdy stands. The count was 1-1. Ground ball to Lou Boudreau at
short. The flip to Ray Mack at second who pivoted and threw to first.
Double play. The streak was over.
"I can't say I'm glad it's over," DiMaggio said after the game. "Of
course, I wanted it to go on as long as I could."
During the streak Joe DiMaggio had 91 hits, 22 multi-hit games, 5 three
hit games, four four hit games, a. 408 batting average that included 15
home runs and 55 runs batted in.
Incredibly, with the streak over - DiMaggio began a new one.
He hit in 16 consecutive games - giving him the distinction of having hit
safely in 72 of 73 games that 1941 season.
A P.S. to the remarkable streak took place more than 30 years later. Joe
DiMaggio recalled: "The guy said he was that cab driver. He apologized
and he was serious. I felt awful. He might have been spending his whole
life thinking he had jinxed me, but I told him he hadn't. My number was
up."
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You can reach
Harvey Frommer at:
Email: harvey.frommer@Dartmouth.EDU
About the Author:
Harvey Frommer is his 33rd consecutive year of writing
sports books. The author of 39 of them including the classics: "New York
City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his
REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM, an oral/narrative history (Abrams, Stewart,
Tabori and Chang) will be published in 2008 as well as a reprint version of
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Frommer along with his wife, Myrna Katz Frommer are the authors of
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This Article is Copyright ©
1995 - 2008 by Harvey Frommer.
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