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Joe DiMaggio’s 56-Game Hitting Streak Begins!

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Joe DiMaggio’s 56-Game Hitting Streak Begins!

“When I sat at a table with Joe and other people…all the men were always looking at Joe instead of me!!” – Marilyn Monroe, speaking of husband Joe DiMaggio.

Haha! If it was actually humanly possible for any man to divert lusting male eyes (at least momentarily) away from Marilyn Monroe, that man was surely Joe DiMaggio…

MAY 15, 1941, THE STREAK BEGINS

I doubt if anyone at the time had an inkling that a largely forgettable game played on May 15, 1941, 80 years ago yesterday, between the Yankees and the White Sox at Yankee Stadium would see the start of one of the most famous records in baseball history, one that still holds our attention all these years later.

The Yankees were coming off a disappointing third-place finish in 1940, and 1941 was starting out no better. The game that day was nothing to write home about. The Yanks got clobbered by the lowly Sox 13-1, dropping them to 14-15 for the season. To make matters worse, DiMaggio committed a throwing error and went 1-4 at the plate, a single in the first inning which was part of a .197 stretch over his last 21 games. The Yankees were already starting to “feel it” from the press and their impatient fans as this New York Times quote attests: “The Yanks never looked worse and derisive shouts greeted the final out of each inning.”

Of course, as we all know, that innocuous single blossomed into one of sports’ most hallowed numbers: “56,” as in 56 straight games with a hit. Harvard professor and baseball fan Stephen Jay Gould once called DiMaggio’s 56-game achievement “the most extraordinary thing that ever happened in American sport.”

Two months later, everything had changed. The Yankees were perched comfortably in first in the American League, six games ahead of Cleveland, en route to the American League pennant and a World Series championship. From May 15 to July 16, Joltin’ Joe put up a remarkable slash line: .408/.463/.717, with 91 hits (35 for extra bases), 15 home runs, and 55 RBIs. 

It’s an understatement to say the streak captured the attention of the nation. Virtually everyone got caught up in it. “What he’d do today?…Did he get a hit?” The baseball world was going crazy! Major newspapers began to write about DiMaggio’s streak early on, but as he approached Ty Cobb’s streak of 40 games

1941 was the year of the Joe DiMaggio 56 game hitting streak

and then George Sisler‘s modern-era American League record of 41 games, it became a national phenomenon. Initially, DiMaggio showed little interest in breaking Sisler’s record, saying “I’m not thinking a whole lot about it… I’ll either break it or I won’t.” It turned into an all-out national frenzy as he surpassed Wee Willie Keeler’s all-time record of 44 straight games.

FUN FACTS ABOUT THE STREAK

THE CAB DRIVER “JINX”

Then there’s the story of the poor Cleveland cab driver who put a “jinx” on DiMaggio enroute to the game against the Indians on July 16th, the day the streak ended. If it wasn’t for him who knows when the streak might have ended? The driver, a life-long Yankees fan, told Joe he had a bad feeling the streak would end that day. Joe just thanked him, shook his hand, and went into the clubhouse without further comment. Thirty years later, they met again. Even though ballplayers are notoriously superstitious, Joe says he never held it against the guy. If we can believe Joe, here’s his retelling of the story: 

“The guy said he was that cab driver. He apologized and he was serious. I felt awful. He might have spent his whole life thinking he’d jinxed me, but I told him he hadn’t. My number was up.”

So today we gladly turn our baseball spotlight on Joltin’ Joe DiMaggio and possibly the greatest record in all of sports, his incredible 56-game hitting streak.

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from Newday article, May 11, 2016 by Dave Whitehorn;  and from the Joe DiMaggio Wikipedia page.

 

 

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