Read Summer of '49: The Yankees and the Red Sox in Postwar America Online
Authors: David Halberstam
Tags: #Non-Fiction, #History, #Biography
Left to right: Chuck Stobbs, Maurice McDermott, and Mel Parnell.
(AP/WIDE WORLD PHOTOS)
Dominic DiMaggio
(UPI/ BETTMANN NEWSPHOTOS)
Ellis Kinder
(NATIONAL BASEBALL LIBRARY, COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.)
Birdie Tebbetts
(NATIONAL BASEBALL LIBRARY, COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.)
Maurice McDermott
(AP/WIDE WORLD PHOTOS)
Ted Williams
(NATIONAL BASEBALL LIBRARY, COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.)
Casey Stengel, new manager of the New York Yankees, leaves Pennsylvania Station for St. Petersburg, Florida, and his first spring training with the Yankees.
(AP/WIDE WORLD PHOTOS)
Tom Yawkey
(GEORGE BRACE PHOTOS)
Jimmy Cannon
(AP/WIDE WORLD PHOTOS)
Mel Allen
(UPI/BETTMANN NEWSPHOTOS)
October 1, 1949: In the fifth inning of the 153rd game of the season, Doerr’s smash was fielded by Yankee second baseman Coleman (left), who relayed the ball to shortstop Rizzuto (right), catching Boston’s Vern Stephens on second base. Rizzuto’s throw to first (note ball at Coleman’s heel) will wipe our Doerr, making it a double play.
(UPI/BETTMANN NEWSPHOTOS)
October 1, 1949: Johnny Lindell is shown being congratulated by a bat boy as he crosses home plate after hitting his eighth-inning home run, which gave the Yankees a 5-4 win. Boston’s Birdie Tebbetts is looking on dejectedly.
(UPI/BETTMANN NEWSPHOTOS)
October 1, 1949: While Yankee fans throw up their arms in jubilation after Lindell’s home run, Ted Williams reflects Boston’s pain.
(UPI/BETTMANN NEWSPHOTOS)