Joe DiMaggio’s 56-Game Streak Comes To An End: July 17,1941!



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Joe DiMaggio’s 56-Game Streak Comes To An End: July 17,1941!




Even though I’m a couple days late on this, I’d be remiss in my duties as your friendly baseball historian if I let the week go by without mentioning the 80th anniversary of Joe DiMaggio’s incredible 56-game hitting streak coming to an end. Here’s a great quote from Joe talking about the final day of the streak:

“…It’s over thirty years later and this guy comes up to me and says he was that cab driver who drove me to the park on July 17, 1941. He apologized for telling me in the cab ride that he thought the streak would end that day if I didn’t get a hit the first time up. He was serious. I felt awful. He might have been spending his whole life thinking he had jinxed me. But I told him he hadn’t. My number was up.” – Joe DiMaggio

Nineteen forty-one was one of the most notable years in baseball history: It was the last, and possibly the greatest, year of baseball’s Golden Age before World War II depleted the major league rosters. Ted Williams hit .406 that year, the last player to hit over .400. The great Lou Gehrig passed away on June 2. And the Dodgers won their first pennant since 1920.  But without doubt, the crowning event that will always mark 1941 as a special year in baseball history was “Joltin’ Joe” DiMaggio’s amazing 56-game hitting streak.

It began innocently enough on May 15, 1941. On that day, Joe went 1-4 with an RBI against Eddie Smith and the Chicago White Sox. From that day until July 16, an amazing 56 games later, DiMaggio hit safely in every game, setting a record that stands as one of the greatest achievements in baseball history.

On July 17, 1941, 80  years ago this week, third baseman Ken Keltner made two terrific backhanded stops to rob DiMaggio of two hits, ending the streak. DiMaggio hit .409 in 223 at-bats during the streak with 91 hits including 56 runs scored, 55 RBIs, 16 doubles, 15 home runs, and four triples. He had 160 total bases. Even more remarkable, he struck out only seven times. DiMaggio had propelled the Yankees to a 41-13 record, a stunning .759 winning percentage.

The day after it ended, he started another one against Bob Feller that lasted 16 games, with the Yankees winning 14. Over the two streaks, DiMaggio batted safely in 72 of 73 games. From May 2, he had been on base in 83 consecutive games. DiMaggio had pulled his team out of an early-season slump and led them to the pennant 17 games ahead of the second-place Red Sox and to a World Series championship.

 

Joe DiMaggio’s hitting streak captured the attention of the nation in 1941

And how about the season that Joe D put together! He hit .357 that year and led the league with 125 RBIs and 348 total bases. He banged out 193 hits, with 30 home runs, 122 runs, 43 doubles, 11 triples, and only 13 strikeouts the entire year. He also compiled a remarkable .440 on-base percentage and .643 slugging average. Joe won the Most Valuable Player Award, beating out Ted Williams by a vote of 291-254.

We may never see his likes again!

Plus it led to one of my all-time favorite baseball ditties: Joltin’ Joe DiMaggio!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1q6odQuCxFU&t=18s

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from Joe DiMaggio Wikipedia page

 

4 thoughts on “Joe DiMaggio’s 56-Game Streak Comes To An End: July 17,1941!

  1. It always left a bad taste with me when Pete Rose bunted for a hit when his team had a big lead, while trying to catch Joe D.

    Of course, he fell short and Joe’s stats were far more impressive, even in just 44 straight games instead of the full 56.

  2. It doesn’t have a direct bearing on “Joltin Joe,” whose hitting streak has stood the test of time and all comers for eighty years, but I’d like to cast my ballot with Drs. Bancroft and Livacari here on the authenticity of Charlie Hustle’s challenge in 1978. Not only did Rose bunt for a hit when the situation called for him to swing away; I remember another game in which he was hitless, facing his last at-bat in a situation clearly requiring an intentional walk, and getting a charitable pitch to hit instead, thereby enabling him to keep his streak alive once more. Call me a hopeless purist, but I couldn’t believe it.

    To me, the NL record belongs to Willie Keeler, standing alone. Rose’s tying streak? Strictly artificial in my book — then and today. (If only I had a book.)

    Thank you for another enjoyable article.

    Best regards,

    Michael

  3. Thanks Michael…I guess I don’t remember all that about Rose, but I’ll certainly take your word for it!

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