Home Run Derby (TV series)
Home Run Derby | |
---|---|
Presented by | Mark Scott |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 26 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Ziv Television Programs Homer Productions |
Distributor |
MGM Television Peter Rodgers Organization |
Release | |
Original network | Syndication |
Original release | January 9, 1960 – July 2, 1960 |
Home Run Derby is a 1960 television show that was held at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles pitting the top sluggers of Major League Baseball against each other in nine-inning home run contests.[1] The show was produced and hosted by actor/broadcaster Mark Scott and distributed by Ziv Television Programs.[2]
Filmed in December 1959,[3] the series aired in syndication from January 9 to July 2, 1960 and helped inspire the Home Run Derby event that is now held the day before the annual Major League Baseball All-Star Game. ESPN staged a revival of the show in 1989.[1]
Gameplay
The rules were similar to modern home run derbies, with two notable exceptions. If a batter did not swing at a pitch that was in the strike zone, that also constituted an out. Also, the contests were conducted in a fashion more similar to a baseball game than the modern home run derbies, in which a player has a set number of outs before his turn is over.
Batters were given three outs per inning, and the player with the most home runs after nine innings won. The defending champion had the advantage of batting last; his opponent batted first. Any ball not hit for a home run was an out. The player did not have to swing at every pitch, but if a pitch was in the strike zone that also constituted an out, as did a swing and a miss. These rarely happened as the pitcher was supposed to give the batters good balls to hit. If the players were tied after nine innings, the Derby went into extra innings as per regular baseball.
When a left-handed hitter played, a special rule was put into place. Wrigley Field in Los Angeles had an inner fence with palm trees and a brick wall located several feet behind it. Any pitch hit in that direction had to clear the wall or hit the top of the trees that stuck out over the wall to count as a home run. This was done because the distance was shorter to right field with the inner fence, which would otherwise give a lefty an unfair advantage. The distances were still slightly different once the deeper right field wall was factored in, but at 339 feet vs. 340 feet the difference was negligible.
While one player was taking his turn at bat, the other player would sit at the host's booth and have a brief conversation, typically unrehearsed small talk about the contest itself or the player's performance that season. Willie Mays, who was a champion later in the run after losing in the initial contest to Mantle, joked with host Scott during his run that the host should be quiet while he batted for his third consecutive home run (for which Mays would receive a $500 bonus). Scott took him up on it, speaking into the mike sotto voce, similar to a bowling or golf announcer, whenever Mays stepped up to the plate. Sometimes when the batter hit a ball into the deep outfield, the player in the booth would comment that it would have gone for extra bases in a real game, to which Scott replied that on Home Run Derby it's nothing but an out. Some players wore golf gloves during the show - a notable addition because the batting glove was still years away from being a normal part of a player's gear.
Participants
Nineteen players,[4] including nine future Hall of Famers, participated in the series, "almost all the power hitters of the era."[4] Following their names is the number of games they appeared in and their win-loss record.
- Hank Aaron:[4] 7 (6–1)
- Bob Allison: 3 (1–2)
- Ernie Banks: 3 (1–2)
- Ken Boyer: 2 (1–1)
- Bob Cerv:[4] 2 (1–1)
- Rocky Colavito: 2 (0–2)
- Gil Hodges: 2 (1–1)
- Jackie Jensen:[4] 4 (2–2)
- Al Kaline: 1 (0–1)
- Jim Lemon:[4] 2 (0–2)
- Harmon Killebrew: 4 (2–2)
- Mickey Mantle:[4] 5 (4–1)
- Eddie Mathews: 1 (0–1)
- Willie Mays:[4] 5 (3–2)
- Wally Post: 2 (1–1)
- Frank Robinson: 2 (1–1)
- Duke Snider: 1 (0–1)
- Dick Stuart: 3 (2–1)
- Gus Triandos: 1 (0–1)
With the death of Ernie Banks on January 23, 2015, six of the "Home Run Derby" cast are still alive: Aaron, Cerv, Colavito, Kaline, Mays, and Robinson.
The pitcher for the show was former Major Leaguer Tom Saffell and the catcher was minor leaguer John VanOrnum,[5] later a San Francisco Giants' coach. Art Passarella, an American League umpire who would go on to a TV acting career, served as the plate umpire. There were also umpires in the outfield to help judge fly balls that were close calls.
Venue choice
Scott noted that Wrigley Field in Los Angeles was chosen to host the event because its fence distances were symmetrical, favoring neither right-handed nor left-handed hitters. Despite Scott's assertions, the left field wall was actually a few feet higher than the right field wall, which slightly penalized right-handed line-drive hitters such as Gus Triandos. The Los Angeles Dodgers played at the Memorial Coliseum during 1958–1961, a site that would have given an unfair advantage to right-handed batters.
Prizes
The winner received a check for $2,000 and was invited back for the next week's episode against a new opponent (a rarity in that era for syndicated games); the runner-up received a check for $1,000.[4] If a batter hit three home runs in a row, he would receive a $500 bonus check. A fourth home run in a row would be worth another $500 bonus check. Any consecutive home runs hit beyond that would each be worth $1,000.[1] Each show would end with the host presenting each player with their prize checks (beginning with the loser), and would award separate checks for consecutive home run bonuses. These were actual bank checks, not the jumbo "display" checks typically used today. For example, if the winner hit three homers in a row, they would receive one check for $2,000 and another for $500 instead of one check for $2,500. As an incentive for throwing good home-run-hitting balls, the pitcher who threw the most pitches for home runs also received a bonus, according to the host.
Unlike more modern home run derbies, which usually award prizes in the form of donations to a player's choice of charity, the economic realities of the era meant that the cash prizes earned by the players on the show were a substantial income supplement.
Records
Hank Aaron won the most money during the show's run, winning $13,500. His run of six consecutive wins was ended by Wally Post, who in turn lost to Dick Stuart the next week.
Bob Allison was the first Home Run Derby participant to return after being defeated and win. His initial appearance was in Aaron's final victory, and he returned to defeat Bob Cerv several weeks later. Allison in turn was defeated by Willie Mays, loser of the first episode, the week after on Mays' way to three straight victories.
Mays, Allison, Mickey Mantle, Rocky Colavito, Jackie Jensen, Jim Lemon, Ernie Banks, and Harmon Killebrew were the only participants to return after being defeated. Colavito and Lemon both lost twice without winning, with Colavito losing to Killebrew and Jensen and Lemon losing to Aaron and Mays. Mays' other loss came to Gil Hodges, Banks was defeated by Mantle and Jensen, and Killebrew lost to Mays and Ken Boyer.
Jackie Jensen was the only player to hit four and subsequently five home runs in a row, doing so in the final episode. However, he lost that day 13-10 to Mickey Mantle. Mantle became the first former champion of Home Run Derby to return and win and because his return occurred in the finale, he was the only returning player to not lose a second time.
Eddie Mathews and Duke Snider were the only left-handed batters to compete. Switch-hitter Mantle batted right-handed in the contests. Mantle hit 372 homers left-handed in his career and only 164 right-handed, but he chose to bat exclusively right-handed for this series, commenting in the first episode that his longest home runs had come right-handed.
Gus Triandos held several interesting distinctions. Despite never hitting more than 30 home runs in a season, and ending his career with 167 home runs, he was chosen because he was the best power-hitting catcher in the major leagues at the time, and he was the only catcher to participate on the program. Triandos also took until the seventh inning to hit his first home run, the longest such drought in the show's history (just surpassing Duke Snider, who hit a home run off the trees in the sixth inning of his contest vs. Hank Aaron). Triandos was nonetheless good-natured, treating his futility with a mix of self-deprecation and humorous sarcasm, and wishing Dick Stuart luck after their competition.
The lowest winning score of any derby was 3-1, which occurred in the aforementioned Aaron-Snider contest. Twice there were 3-2 finals and only one home run was hit by a player two additional times.
Demise
Scott's play-by-play and interviewing style was not very different from many of the announcers of that era (straightforward and upbeat). Scott died on July 13, 1960 from a heart attack at the age of 45; in the wake of his death, the producers decided not to replace him and instead canceled the show entirely.
ESPN revival
In 2003 and 2004, the Major League Baseball Players Association held similar contests at Cashman Field in Las Vegas, Nevada. The contests were held just before spring training, consisted of eight-man elimination tournaments, and were televised on ESPN. The contests lasted for only five innings.
Episode status
The original series is intact, having been rerun on ESPN from December 17 to 28, 1988 and July 10 to October 28, 1989. Its rights now belong to MGM Television. The series proved popular and was credited in part with the establishment of a classic sports network which would eventually become ESPN Classic.
ESPN Classic ran the program in primetime in September and November 2009 after a 2-year hiatus, and still occasionally carries episodes in middays. In later years the intro, as well as some comments at the close of the show, were narrated by former Los Angeles Dodgers announcer Ross Porter.
In Summer 2007, MGM Home Entertainment (with distribution by 20th Century Fox, which is owned by the same company that owns the current over-the-air home of the MLB, the Fox Broadcasting Company) began to release the 1960 series on three DVDs. The first DVD was released on July 10, the second was issued on August 14, and the third came out on September 25. In March 2008, the three volumes were re-released as a box set.
Episodes are also available via the iTunes Store.
Results
Episode # | Winner (winnings /cumulative winnings) | Loser (winnings / cumulative winnings) | Score |
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1 | Mickey Mantle ($2,000) | Willie Mays ($1,000) | 9-8 |
2 | Mickey Mantle ($2,000/$4,000) | Ernie Banks ($1,000) | 5-3 |
3 | Mickey Mantle ($2,500/$6,500) | Jackie Jensen ($1,000) | 9-2 |
4 | Harmon Killebrew ($2,000) | Mickey Mantle ($1,000/$7,500) | 9-8 |
5 | Harmon Killebrew ($2,000/$4,000) | Rocky Colavito ($1,500) | 6-5 (10 innings) |
6 | Ken Boyer ($2,000) | Harmon Killebrew ($1,000/$5,000) | 3-2 |
7 | Hank Aaron ($2,000) | Ken Boyer ($1,000/$3,000) | 9-6 |
8 | Hank Aaron ($2,000/$4,000) | Jim Lemon ($1,000) | 6-4 |
9 | Hank Aaron ($2,000/$6,000) | Eddie Mathews ($1,000) | 4-3 |
10 | Hank Aaron ($2,500/$8,500) | Al Kaline ($1,000) | 5-1 |
11 | Hank Aaron ($2,000/$10,500) | Duke Snider ($1,000) | 3-1 |
12 | Hank Aaron ($2,000/$12,500) | Bob Allison ($1,000) | 3-2 |
13 | Wally Post ($2,000) | Hank Aaron ($1,000/$13,500) | 7-4 |
14 | Dick Stuart ($2,500) | Wally Post ($1,000/$3,000) | 11-9 (10) |
15 | Dick Stuart ($2,500/$5,000) | Gus Triandos ($1,000) | 7-1 |
16 | Frank Robinson ($2,000) | Dick Stuart ($1,000/$6,000) | 6-3 |
17 | Bob Cerv ($2,000) | Frank Robinson ($1,500/$3,500) | 8-7 |
18 | Bob Allison ($2,000/$3,000) | Bob Cerv ($1,000/$3,000) | 4-3 |
19 | Willie Mays ($2,000/$3,000) | Bob Allison ($1,000/$4,000) | 11-3 |
20 | Willie Mays ($2,000/$5,000) | Harmon Killebrew ($1,000/$6,000) | 7-6 |
21 | Willie Mays ($2,000/$7,000) | Jim Lemon ($1,000/$2,000) | 6-3 |
22 | Gil Hodges ($2,000) | Willie Mays ($1,000/$8,000) | 6-3 |
23 | Ernie Banks ($2,000/$3,000) | Gil Hodges ($1,000/$3,000) | 11-7 |
24 | Jackie Jensen ($2,500/$3,500) | Ernie Banks ($1,500/$4,500) | 14-11 |
25 | Jackie Jensen ($2,000/$5,500) | Rocky Colavito ($1,000/$2,500) | 3-2 |
26 | Mickey Mantle ($2,500/$10,000) | Jackie Jensen ($3,000/$8,500) | 13-10 |
References
- 1 2 3 McShane, Larry (July 29, 1989). "'Home Run Derby' is back, back, back on ESPN". Ocala Star-Banner (Florida). Associated Press. p. 4D.
- ↑ Mark Scott from the Internet Movie Database
- ↑ Sminda, Don (2011). "Home Run Derby: A tale of baseball and Hollywood". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 25 Things We Miss In Baseball from the Sports Illustrated/CNN website
- ↑ Nevada State Journal, July, 1960, p. 9
External links
- Home Run Derby at the Internet Movie Database
- Jump The Shark: "Home Run Derby"
- Announcement of ESPN's revival
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