232F2E757C757D70776872450 wrote: You might also like this day by day account of the 1960 season from spring training thru the WS. (I wrote it.)
https://www.amazon.com/s?k=marchinetti& ... nb_sb_noss
Just ordered your book , it was a season to remember for sure .
I just finished reading my copy last week. Bobster did a great job of providing details of each game and information on each player. I was eight years old in 1960 so I have little recall of the season as it played out, except for the ending of Game Seven. I had just gotten home from school and plopped down in front of the TV as Maz came to the plate. Nothing, sports-wise, has topped that moment for me.
I was also 8 in 1960, so I don’t remember much of the season, but I recall the Smith homer, and the walkoff by Maz. I watched the game on ATT last night, and I did not know Stengel had Ford warming up in the seventh, and he did not pinch hit for Bobby Schantz. The Yankees were up 5-4 at that time. Also Schantz batted in the eighth when the Yankees scored two more runs. If Stengel had brought in Ford the outcome of the game may have been different. In his two WS starts he shutout the Bucs for 18 innings.
Ford had just pitched a 9 inning shutout the day before but wanted to pitch in relief in game 7 if needed. I've read that Stengel wouldn't tell him to warmup in the BP (apparently because he had pitched the day before) but Ford took it upon himself to go to the BP and warm up.
I wonder if Stengel would have used him in extra innings. He still had Grba, Duren, Arroyo, Maas and Ditmar available. Extra innings would have been interesting. Stengel only had one position player left on his bench. But it was slugger Bob Cerv. If Maz hadn't won it in the 9th, Stuart was on deck to bat for Haddix. So Murtaugh's bench in extras would have been Baker, Oldis and Schofield. Mizell was ready to pitch the 10th with Gibbon, Labine, Cheney, Green and Witt still in the BP. But Labine had pitched 3 innings the day before. Mizell had pitched 2 scoreless innings the day before. Cheney, Green and Witt had also pitched the day before. So Gibbon would be the most rested. Cheney had a 2 inning scoreless appearance in game 3. Gibbon had a scoreless inning in game 3. Other than Witt, those were the only scoreless appearances by a reliever (excluding Mizell) not named Face. Witt had made 3 scoreless appearances but had allowed all 4 inherited runners he faced to score. I don't think Murtaugh had much confidence in his BP. Witt had been warming with Mizell.