"Get him out of here. Put in someone who can catch a fly ball."
At the start of play on Sept. 26, 1956, the Brooklyn Dodgers trailed the first place Milwaukee Braves by one-half game. The next day, Don Newcombe started against the Philadelphia Phillies' ace, Robin Roberts. It was Newcombe's next to last start of the season.
Duke Snider hit an inside the park home run in the first inning to stake "Big Newk" to a one run lead. Yes, it was possible to hit an inside the park home run at bandbox Ebbets Field.
The Phillies came back in the second when Del Ennis hit a slow ground ball on which Newcombe couldn't make the play. Ennis was credited with a single. Willie "Puddin' Head" Jones hit a similar comebacker. Newk threw him out as Ennis moved to second.
Left-handed hitting Elmer Valo then hit a fly ball to left field that Sandy Amoros dropped for an error. It seemed that the sun and the wind were too much for him. The Philies took advantage to score three runs off Newcombe, two of which were unearned.
In the seventh inning, with Don Bessent on the hill, Amoros failed to charge a Del Ennis single, allowing Stan Lopata to reach third and Ennis to take second. The lackadaisical play set up two more runs as the Phillies beat Brooklyn, 7-3
The Dodgers trailed the Milwaukee Braves by one full game.
Brooklyn manager Walt Alston excused Amoros.
"I can't fault the little guy," Alston told reporters. "He had a bad day, yes. But he has been hitting well and helping us to win games. And don't forget that world-series catch he made in the last game. I'm keeping him in the line-up and who knows? He may help us win the games we need from now on."
The Dodgers recovered and led Milwaukee by one game with one game left for each team. Don Newcombe started for Brooklyn, seeking his 27th win. He faced the Pittsburgh Pirates' Vern Law.
Leading off the sixth inning with Brooklyn ahead 6-2, Amoros hit a home run, but in Ebbets Field, the concept of "enough runs" didn't exist.
When Amoros led off the eighth inning, the Pirates had pulled within one run -- the run provided by Amoros' sixth inning home run.
Amoros hit another solo home run. The final score was 8-6.
Brooklyn won its second consecutive pennant, Newcombe won his 27th game, but of greater importance, Newcombe learned to think before denigrating a teammate.
References:
By, A. D. (1956, Nov 27). Sports of the times. New York Times (1923-Current File), pp. 58. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/113576636?accountid=46260
By ROSCOE McGOWEN The New,York Times. (1956, Sep 27). Dodgers lose to roberts of phillies and fall one game behind idle braves. New York Times (1923-Current File), pp. 45-45. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/113623937?accountid=46260
Published by Harold Friend
I am a science teacher who loves baseball. More likely, I am a baseball fan who became a science teacher because I couldn't hit or throw a baseball. I received my doctorate in science education from NYU i... View profile
The Brooklyn Dodgers Dominated Hall of Famer Carl HubbellCarl Hubbell was one of the greatest of all pitchers, but he had problems trying to defeat the Brooklyn Dodgers.- Don Newcombe- the First Black Pitcher to Win 20 GamesDon Newcombe was the only man to be named Rookie of the Year, MVP, and win a Cy Young, but his greatest victory was over alcoholism.
- Don Newcombe Started the Fateful Ralph Branca GameMention Bobby Thomson's home run and people think of Ralph Branca, but not too many fans talk about Don Newcombe, who started the game.
- 1955 World Series: Whitey Ford Almost Beat the Brooklyn Dodgers Single-HandedlyThe fact that former Yankee great Whitey Ford failed to complete the first game of the 1955 World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers at Yankee Stadium was a negative, but the New York Yankees left-hander still manage...
- Willie Mays' Greatest Play was Against the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1951Willie Mays' greatest play was a brilliant catch and a seemingly impossible throw against Brooklyn in 1951.
- The Brooklyn Dodgers Finally Beat New York
- Don Newcombe: One of the Last of the Ironmen or I'll Start the Second Game
- Fifty Years Ago, Don Larsen was Perfect
- The Major League Baseball Games of the Forties
- The Dodgers' Walter Alston-One Year at a Time
- Home Field was Not an Advantage in Four Consecutive World Series
- Johnny Podres Dead at 75: Pitcher Hurled the Brooklyn Dodgers to Their Sole World...


