Babe Ruth and the Yankees play in Cleveland 100 years ago, a breakdown

Jun 1, 2020 616.7K views 4:37

What Happened

On June 15, 1920, the New York Yankees, led by legendary slugger Babe Ruth, travel to Cleveland to take on the Indians. The game is part of a century-old rivalry between the two storied franchises. In the top of the fourth inning, Babe Ruth steps up to the plate, leading off for the Yankees. The 25-year-old superstar takes some warm-up swings, digging his cleats into the dirt as he settles in. After a few practice cuts, Ruth steps into the box, facing off against Cleveland pitcher Carl Mays. The first pitch from Mays is called a strike, eliciting a frustrated reaction from Ruth. On the next offering, the Bambino unleashes his powerful swing, the follow-through sending up a cloud of dust. Unfortunately for the Yankees, Ruth whiffs, striking out swinging. As Ruth dejectedly walks back to the dugout, his teammate Wally Pipp steps up to the plate. Pipp swings and lifts a fly ball that is caught for the out. The Yankees' players quickly clear the field, not waiting for Pipp to fully exit before the next pitch is thrown. In the bottom half of the inning, the Indians' baserunner tries to steal third base, but is caught by Yankees catcher Hannah. It's a rare pickoff play, with the catcher standing up to make the throw and nab the runner at the hot corner. Later in the game, the cameras capture Ruth coming to the plate again. This time, he rips a triple to deep left field, showing off his prodigious power. The crowd erupts, but the filmmakers likely staged a dramatized "home run" sequence, as records indicate Ruth did not actually hit a home run in this particular contest. As the game winds down, the fans are seen casually exiting the ballpark, a sight not commonly witnessed in modern times. The Yankees ultimately fall to the Indians, but the focus remains on the legendary Babe Ruth and his larger-than-life presence on the diamond, even 100 years ago.

Full Transcript

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let's go check out some footage from 100

years ago June 15th 1920 babe taking

some warm-up throes nice little digging

into that dirt really digging in Oh what

is that a modern water core kind of blew