Happy birthday Pops
The man who 'didn't just hit pitchers, he took away their dignity'
Willie Stargell would've turned 82 today
That above quote is from Hall of Famer Don Sutton, who faced Willie Stargell a painstaking 165 times. Stargell, who would've celebrated his 82nd birthday today, clubbed eight homers, six doubles and 21 RBIs off the right-hander during his career, including the postseason. He also hit two monstrous homers off a couple of Sutton's L.A. teammates -- two of the six to ever leave the confines of Dodger Stadium.
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He also hit arguably the farthest at Olympic Stadium -- connecting on an estimated 535-footer during a game against the Expos in May 1978. Pitcher Wayne Twitchell compared it to a "tracer bullet." "You could hear it when it when it hit [the upper deck]. I was kind of in shock," said Twitchell.
Just like in Philadelphia, Montreal honored the blast by painting the afflicted seat in Pirate gold. Additionally, the Expos gifted the slugger a life preserver for his massive homers at their old home, Jarry Park Stadium. Stargell used to deposit blasts into the public pool located over the right-field fence, sending people scattering for cover. The body of water was even informally renamed "La piscine de Willie," or, Willie's pool.
At his home ballparks, Stargell was one of a few to reach the upper deck at Three Rivers Stadium. And of the 18 balls to clear the 86-foot-high right-field roof at Forbes Field (1909-70), the lefty had seven of them. Babe Ruth did it once -- on his 714th and final long ball in 1935. Here's a look at how high and far Stargell's balls had to go those SEVEN times:
https://www.mlb.com/news/willie-stargell-s-amazing-career?partnerId=zh-20220306-557296-mlb-1-A&qid=1026&utm_id=zh-20220306-557296-mlb-1-A&bt_ee=CXaUPATUeq1Pyyt2RGEczoQ1%2FU0XOrLFXpYOm5bT3%2Bu18%2FcxWAys%2BFXn%2BqKPlz63&bt_ts=1646578817331
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