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Slaughter's Mad Dash

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Event in the 1946 World Series
This article is about the event in the1946 World Series. For the Canadian television game show, seeThe Mad Dash. For the Xbox launch title, seeMad Dash Racing.

Sportsman's Park inSt. Louis, venue of Slaughter's Mad Dash

TheMad Dash, orSlaughter's Mad Dash, refers to an event in the eighthinning of the seventh game of the1946 World Series between theSt. Louis Cardinals and theBoston Red Sox.

Background

[edit]
Enos Slaughter

Personnel involved

[edit]
PlayerTeamPosition
Enos SlaughterSt. Louis CardinalsBaserunner
Harry WalkerSt. Louis CardinalsBatter
Mike GonzálezSt. Louis CardinalsThird base coach
Bob KlingerBoston Red SoxPitcher
Leon CulbersonBoston Red SoxCenter fielder
Johnny PeskyBoston Red SoxShortstop
Roy ParteeBoston Red SoxCatcher

Context

[edit]

The1946 Boston Red Sox ran away with theAmerican League crown, finishing 12games ahead of theDetroit Tigers with a 104–50 record.[1] The Red Sox were heavy favorites in the World Series against theSt. Louis Cardinals.[2][3] Boston led the series, three games to two, as it headed back toSportsman's Park inSt. Louis for Game 6.[4] The Cardinals won that game with sensational defense and a brilliant pitching performance byHarry Brecheen to bring the series to a deciding seventh game.[5]

Game 7 was played inSportsman's Park on October 15, 1946. After Red Sox center fielderDom DiMaggio drove in two runs in the top of the eighth, the score was tied 3–3.[6][7] DiMaggio pulled a hamstring during the play and was forced to leave the game; his place was taken bypinch runnerLeon Culberson, who remained in the game as DiMaggio's replacement in center field in the bottom of the inning.[6][8]

Cardinal right fielderEnos Slaughter led off with a single off of pitcherBob Klinger.[6] After a failedbunt attempt byWhitey Kurowski and a flyout to left field byDel Rice, Slaughter found himself still on first base with two outs.[6] Left fielderHarry Walker stepped to the plate and, after the count reached two balls and one strike, Cardinals managerEddie Dyer called for ahit-and-run.

The play

[edit]
Johnny Pesky

With the hit-and-run on, Slaughter was running on the pitch, and with two outs, he was at full speed when Walker lined the pitch into left-center field. Culberson fielded the ball, then threw a relay to shortstopJohnny Pesky. Slaughter rounded third base, where legend says he ran through third base coachMike González's stop sign and headed for home, while a stunned Pesky "held the ball", hesitating when he should have fired home immediately, costing the Red Sox the seventh and deciding game of the World Series.

The validity of this description, however, has been hotly debated ever since. While some claimed that Pesky, assuming that Slaughter would not be running home, checked Walker at first base, instead of immediately firing home, and others contended that Pesky was so shocked to see Slaughter attempting to score, that he had a mental lapse which accounted for a delay, neither of these claims have borne out to be definitively true. The notion that Pesky unnecessarily held the ball has also been called into question; the replay does not conclusively show such hesitation, and other contemporaneous accounts suggest that Pesky promptly executed his relay throw to home plate. In addition, several reports state that the third base coach was in fact frantically waving Slaughter around third, not attempting to stop him. Either way, Slaughter scored just as Red Sox catcherRoy Partee caught Pesky's relay up the line from home plate.[9][10][11][12][13]

Official scoring

[edit]

Walker's hit was scored as a double,[6][7] although some contend that it could have been scored a single, with Walker advancing to second on the throw home.[14][15]

Aftermath

[edit]

The run put the Cardinals ahead 4–3 and proved to be the winning run of the decisive seventh game. In Boston, "Pesky held the ball" became a catchphrase, although a possible poor throw from Culberson may have been more to blame. Slaughter himself later admitted that if DiMaggio had still been in the game, he never would have considered trying to score on the play.[12][16][17] In St. Louis, a statue depicting Slaughter sliding across home plate at the end of the play stands outside the current ballpark.[18][19] This play was named #10 on theSporting News list of Baseball's 25 Greatest Moments in 1999.[20]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"The 1946 Season".Retrosheet. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2025.
  2. ^Glassman, Sam (October 6, 1946)."It Seems to Me (column)".The Macon News.Macon, Georgia. p. 24. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2025 – via newspapers.com.As I see it the Red Sox look like the next World Series champions—and in five games.
  3. ^Considine, Bob (October 6, 1946)."Boston, Cards Tangle Today in Series Opener".Springfield News-Leader. p. A-15. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2025 – via newspapers.com....with the explosive Red Sox still 7 to 20 favorites to atomize the St. Louis Cardinals
  4. ^"The 1946 Post-Season Games".Retrosheet. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2025.
  5. ^Bolda, Philip."October 13, 1946: Joyous Cardinals hail gameness of Brecheen and Slaughter in Game 6".sabr.org.Society for American Baseball Research. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2025.
  6. ^abcde"Retrosheet Boxscore: St. Louis Cardinals 4, Boston Red Sox 3".Retrosheet. October 15, 1946. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  7. ^ab"Boxscore: October 15, 1946".Baseball Reference. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  8. ^"Former Red Sox great Dom DiMaggio dies at 92".USA Today. May 8, 2009. Archived fromthe original on May 11, 2009. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016 – viaWayback Machine.
  9. ^Thorn, John (October 25, 2013)."Pesky: The Man, the Myth, the Truth".mlblogs.com.
  10. ^Nowlin, Bill."Johnny Pesky".sabr.org.Society for American Baseball Research.
  11. ^Crehan, Herb (June 3, 2022)."A Tribute to Mr. Red Sox: Johnny Pesky".bostonbaseballhistory.com.
  12. ^abHolway, John."Slaughter, Pesky, and the Power of Myth".Baseball Guru. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  13. ^Bouton, Chris (October 22, 2018)."The Man Behind Pesky's Pole".The Hardball Times.
  14. ^"Slaughter's 'Mad Dash' let Cardinals rule in '46".Washington Times. October 25, 2004. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  15. ^"Enos Slaughter's Mad Dash".Time. October 21, 2008. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  16. ^"'Pesky held the ball' a part of BoSox lore".ESPN.AP. October 22, 2004. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  17. ^Feeney, Mark (August 15, 2012)."Red Sox legend Johnny Pesky dies".Boston.com. Archived fromthe original on October 12, 2016. RetrievedOctober 11, 2016 – viaWayback Machine.
  18. ^"Enos Slaughter".The Sporting Statues Project. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  19. ^""Country" Slaughter hit .300 in 19-year career".ESPN Classic. August 16, 2002. RetrievedOctober 9, 2016.
  20. ^"Baseball's 25 Greatest Moments by The Sporting News".baseball-almanac.com. RetrievedApril 20, 2023.

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