The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, January 31, 1994 - 3 QA: BO:Y: gTMSOP Thomson The man who hit one of baseball's most famous home runs discusses his life KEN SUGIURA Close But No Sugiura Bobby Thanson knows what it feels like to g from an ordinary ballplayer to a legend overnight. Thomson wilfforever be recognized as the man rho hit the legendary "ShotHeard 'oundthe World "That home run liftd the New York Giants to a dramati playoff win over the Brooklyn Dolgers and into the 1951 World Series Following stints with the Milwau- kee Braves, Boston Red Sox and Bal- timore Orioles, Thomson retiredfrom baseball in 1960. He finished with a career .2 70 batting average and 264 home runs in his career. Recently Daily Sports Writer Tim Smith talked to Thomson, 70, about the home run, his life as a retired * player and the state of the game. D: What wereyou feeling preced- ing your famous it-bat against Ralph Branca (the Dodgers' pitcher) in the one-game playof in 1951? -.T: Itwas a one-in-a-lifetime situ- ation. All I can do, looking back on e'drything thatappened and just ra- tionalizing it, issay that Ijust got back tp fundamental;. There was something that pre- ceded my at-bit which I think was a plus for me. Whitey Lockman hit a double and Dot Mueller slid into third base and hurt '.is ankle severely. Now insted of men on second and third andme getting right up to bat against Dm Newcombe, Mueller's tirt ankle stipped the game. He was lying on theground and he was in pain. So I wA down there with the bat in my hand, nd my mind was taken cOmpletely )ut of the game by that incident. It wasn'tintil they carried him off the field tha I got back into baseball. It just took ny mind off the game. "'The at-bit was aonce-in-a-lifetime situatibn foime. As I walked to home plate, I reaized that I had to get up there and co something. I talked to myself, psyphing myself up, which is something never had done in my life before. -,I'm teling myself, "Get up there and give yourself a chance to hit. Do a good job'That's all I wanted to do. Doing a god job means sitting back, relaxed, aid waiting for the ball. I kep elling rmyself'towait aid watch.I kipt calling myself an S.O.B. "You S.CB, get up there and give yourselfahanceto hit. Waitand watch, wait and vatch." I had never done that before. I didi't even know that Branca had repllced Newcombe. It's an odd thing. D: Vhen you hit it, did you know it was gne? T: feah, I thought I had a home run beciuse I really hit it well.I made good ontact. It was a high inside fastbaf Actually, it was a ball, but it wasn'tthat far inside that I wasn't able to jump on it. I As pretty quick with my hands, and when the ball is inside, you have to be iery quick with your hands to get out in front of it. -It took off when I hit it. It was a line drive heading for the upper stands, and allofa sudden I saw the ball had tremer ious spin on it, and I thought, "It's not a home run. It's only a base hit." I emember that thought going througi my mind. I gwss I was about halfway to first when tIe ball disappeared in the stands. D: Vhat were your feelings when you wee rounding the bases? SPORTS NEWS TOTAL TO THE MINUTE INFO CALL NOW! I80.990.5505 EXT 997 $2.00 PER MIN. AVG CALL 2 MINS AVER~AGE COST PER CALL $4.00 MAXIMUM COST $10.00 TOUCH TONE PHONE REQ UNDER 18 GET PARENTS PERMISSION stRAUSS ENTERPRISES CARMEIL, CA (408) 625-1910 T: It was excitement that I never experienced. During your baseball ca- reer, I think you're sometimes the goat and sometimes the hero. You have your exciting moments during your life span, but this was something special. I was hyperventilating running around the bases and I knew I wasn't running my usual home run trot. D: What was it like going from a non high-profile player to a celebrity overnight? T: I don't know. I never consid- ered myself a celebrity type, high- profile player. The next spring I came up to bat against the (St. Louis) Cardinals, and that home run aura was still around my head. We were losing by three runs in the last half of the ninth, and I came up to bat with the bases loaded, and I hit a home run. Things like that didn't continue. My career was fairly inconsistent. D: Do you find it interesting that you still receive a lot of attention for your home run, even though it's been over 40 years since you've hit it? T: Oh yeah. I've always been amazed about the attention it gets. I've enjoyed the attention obviously, and it's nice to be remembered, be- cause having a job and having a fam- ily keeps it in the proper perspective. D: What have you been doing since you retired from baseball? T: I took aptitude tests when I retired because I'm a high school graduate. I went right into baseball after high school, so when I got out of baseball I had to see if I had enough brains to get myself a job. I took these aptitude tests at Stevens Institute and that took me into sales in the paper business. I worked as a sales- man for the world's largest producer of corrugated boxes and bags, which was located in Chicago. D: Was it tough for you to adjust to life in the real world after living the dream life of a Major League baseball player? T: Oh sure. I lived out in Jersey in the country side and I had to commute to New York. At best it was aone-and- a-half hour trip each way, so it was at least a three-hour round trip. I had to take fodr'trains'each way. I would drive to the station and take four trains to get to the office. I became what they call a strap- hanger. In the summertime it would be very crowded and like a steambath. I realized what I was going through, and I said,;"Well you have to do it." D: Were you longing for your baseball days when you were dealing with the daily grind of a working man? T: No, oh no.Iwas realistic enough to know it was time to go to work and baseball was finished. Iremembersay- ing to myself that all it takes is a sense of humor. Working gave me a lot of satisfac- tion; growing up a bit, finding out what was going on in the world. For the first time it gave me the satisfac- tion of learning what the word work meant. It gave me a sense of value about work and money and a lot of things. D: Do you think retired players receive enough financial assistance from Major League Baseball? T: Money has played such a big part in all sports. I've always won- dered if management couldn't have educated these players how to handle their money and how to conduct them- selves. Maybe there are some teams who have that kind of thing to help the guys grow up faster. I try to picture myself coming out of high school or even college, and all of a sudden walking around with a couple of million dollars in your pocket. That's quite an adjustment. D: Do you keep in touch with any of your former teammates or friends from the game? T: Occasionally. It's funny, Iprob- ably talk to Branca, the guy who threw the home run pitch to me, more than anybody. We go to different baseball func- tions together and we've become friends. We kind of go together. D: It's a little bit of trivia that Willie Mays was on-deck while you were batting, in what was his rookie season. What were the Giant players' feelings about Mays? T: The first night he showed up, we were playing Philadelphia. I re- member he musthave had like a dozen bats with him. We watched him in batting practice hit the ball out of the park. Then he had trouble getting a hit once he got into the game. It took him a while to break in to the League, but he looked like something special. He was just a young kid who looked like he was born to play baseball. D: Having seen both Willie Mays and his godson Barry Bonds, how would you compare them? T: I can't compare Barry Bonds, because he hasn't been around that long. Just the little bit I saw him last year, he's quite a player. In terms of what they do on the field, I'm not going to say one's better than the other. We've got to give Barry a few more years to see how he continues to perform before you compare him to Willie Mays. D: I noticed you were at the 1993 Dodgers-Giants series in which the Giants were in a heated battle for the division crown with the Atlanta Braves. Did you have visions of an- other one game playoff? T: Well, no. Peter McGowan, who runs the Giants and was responsible for keeping them in San Francisco, contacted me and thought that if I were out there that it might bring the Giants luck. Naturally I enjoyed going out there and rooting for them, but I certainly never expected to make a difference in winning or losing. They won the first three games but they lost the last one. That was the difference. In fact, if they had won the last one, they were going to have me go to San Francisco and throw out the first ball. D: Did Joe Carter's World Series- winning home run against the Phillies bring back any memories of your own famous shot? T: Oh sure. It brings back memo- ries of all the home runs. I thought of Bill Mazeroski's homer to win the series. Mine wasn't to win the series, it was to win the pennant. D: Do you think today's players are better than the ones of your era? T: It's hard to say. I don't see enough baseball games. It's so easy for the old guys to say that these new guys aren't as good as we were, be- cause I heard the same thing when I played. They said we couldn't play with the old guys. There are players today who are every bit as good as players we had. Of course they have a lot of guys who maybe couldn't have played with us that are playing today because of ex- pansion. D: Do you think today's baseball salaries have gotten out of control? T: Oh yeah. How much money can you spend, and where's the money coming from? It doesn't sound to me like it's good economics. Television is not going to continue to throw money away. It's too bad. The value system has just been shotdown in terms of money, D: What do you think Major League Baseball can do to improve this? T: Of course I don't know any of the economics of the game, and who's making money and who isn't, but it would seem to me that the sooner it gets run on a sensible business basis it will improve. My concern is for the fans. I was always concerned about fans when I played, and the fans seem to be left behind the way these guys switch clubs to get another million dollars. It's too bad. Big Ten hoops in need of some work, Mr. Delaney D ear Commissioner Delaney: My heartiest congratulations on what looks like another fine season for your conference. The Big Ten won four bowl games, and there is talk that eight men's basketball teams will make the NCAA tournament. The Penn State women's team is No. 1 in the country and Iowa isn't far behind. You're looking pretty good. That said, I'm coming to you with a suggestion. Name me two problems with Big Ten basketball. Right, the nonsense that is the men's basketball's schedule and the weak attendance for women's basketball at some schools (like mine). Let's look at the men's case first. The midweek games have got to go. How do you justify taking players out of class during the middle of the week to play road games? Television is the only reason, and that is pretty disturbing. ESPN needs entertainment for weeknights, and who better to entertain than Juwan Howard or Alan Henderson? Let's conveniently forget the fact that while they're out there earning money for their schools and ESPN, they're also expected to earn good grades, in spite of the handicap of missing all those classes. Talk about perpetuating the dumb-jock stereotype. True, charter flights have reduced the amount of class time players miss. But if there's nothing wrong with it, then how come every other sport plays almost all of its games on the weekends? Commissioner, if the Big Ten cared about its basketball players as students, you would never let this farce happen. OK, I've vented my spleen. We can now move onto the attendance at women's basketball games, a smaller problem. Or should I say minuscule? Yes, some teams, like Iowa's, draw well, but that is very much the exception. I'm assuming that, like Michigan, most schools offer admission to these games for nothing, or next to it. Even still, when our women's team plays its Friday night games at home, I think the library gets a bigger draw than Crisler does. What gives? Like you, I don't buy the argument that no one comes because the game is boring. I've been to a handful of games, and while I'm no expert, I do know that I remained alert and awake the whole time, which is more than I can say for my trips to the library. People here can say they don't want to see a losing team, but that doesn't explain the poor showings at other schools. Furthermore, I'm sure that if the men's team were as bad, there would still be plenty of people watching. I just think the game needs a little push, something to bring fans out to see that this game isn't so bad. That's where I come in, Commissioner. I'm here, ready and waiting, with my catch-all suggestion. I won't even copyright it, so you can use it for free. Play Friday night doubleheaders with the men and women, 5 p.m. for the women, and 7:30 p.m. for the men. I've been thinking this one over for awhile, and I really believe it can work. Here's why: I'm sure that other fans, like they do here, come out early for the men's games to get good seats. And if they're already there, why not give them something to watch? If simply getting people to watch women's basketball is the problem, then you've got the problem licked right there. I think this is the biggest boost you could give to the women's game, short of resorting to violence. Fans will realize they can watch two good games for the price of one, and will start coming out earlier to see the women play. If the game fails to draw fans, then I guess it actually is boring, and I just failed to realize it. And while this is going on, the men will be able to go to'class and earn better grades. Then if they still do poorly, I guess they are dumb, and I just failed to realize it. That was a joke. Seriously, it would make life a lot easier for the players. 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