Posts Tagged ‘Astrodome Firsts’

ROOTS 5: OTHER ASTRODOME FIRSTS

February 23, 2013
4/10/1965: Jim Beauchamp was the first Astros batter to light up the famous scoreboard in a day game with the Baltimore Orioles when his third inning home run contributed mightily to the club's 11-8 first win of any kind in the Astrodome.

4/10/1965: Jim Beauchamp was the first Astros batter to light up the famous scoreboard in a day game with the Baltimore Orioles when his third inning home run contributed mightily to the club’s 11-8 second win of any kind in the Astrodome.

Although his first Astros home run into the left field pavilion seats in the second game ever played in the Dome didn’t count in the long run because of its exhibition game status, it was still a landmark first time that the famous new all Texas cowboys and bulls scoreboard got lit up by a home club long ball in the great new land of inner playing space.

The world didn’t have to wait long for an official first indoor home run. As with Mantle before him, however, it simply wasn’t going to spring from the bat of an Astros slugger. The first official game home run in the Astrodome came early in the first contest of the season, in a battle  played out on 4/12/1965 between the visiting Philadelphia Phillies and the home team Houston Astros. As in the first exhibition game, it was again a member of the opposition that cracked the first long ball indoors when Phillies first baseman Dick Allen banged out a two run homer in the third inning off Bob Bruce that stood up as the 2-0 final score of the very first Astrodome Opening Day contest.

Astrodome Landmarks from 4/12/1965:

First Astros Loss – 4/12/1965, 0-2.

First Win – Philadelphia Phillies

First Losing Pitcher – Bob Bruce (Astros)

First Astros Reliever – Hal Woodeshick

First Winning Pitcher – Chris Short (Phillies)

First Official Domer Homer – Dick Allen (Phillies)

First Run – Ruben Amaro (Phillies)

First Error – Dick Allen (Phillies)

First Astros Double – Joe Morgan

First Astros Multiple Hit Game – Joe Morgan (2 for 3)

After the 4/12/1965 Dome opener, the Astros went on an eight-game road trip that kept them out-of-town until 4//23/1965 when they returned to the Astrodome to play a three-game series with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

The Astros took the first series game, 4-3, establishing these additional Astrodome firsts:

First Astros Win – 4/23/1965, 4-3.

First Losing Team Foe – Pittsburgh Pirates

First Astros Winning Pitcher and Win in Relief – Dave Giusti

First Opponent Losing Pitcher – Al McBean (Pirates)

First Astros Batter Hit by Pitcher – Ron Brand by Al McBean

First Astros Intentional Walk – to Al Spangler by Al McBean

The next day, 4/24/1965, the Astros finally added the big offensive first:

First Astros Home Run – Bob Aspromonte

First Astros Home Run with at least One Runner on Base – Jimmy Wynn

That’s it for now. If you have any firsts facing you this weekend, may they all be pleasant ones.

* Thanks to Baseball Almanac and Baseball Reference for their usual roles in making basic historical data research a thousand times easier than it was in the old pre-Internet days. If we really wanted to cover all of the baseball firsts associated with the opening of the Astrodome, we could be at the research side of things 12 hours a day for the next six months and still be scraping the surface of new material that had not occurred to us previously.

ROOTS 4: Astrodome Firsts

February 22, 2013

EPSON MFP image

Thanks to a writer I unforgivably forgot in yesterday’s summary of the 1965 Houston sportswriter scene, we have a list of some little known firsts in the history of the Astrodome from its first game between the New York Yankees and the home based Houston Astros on Friday, April 9, 1965. The writer was columnist Wells Twombly of the Houston Chronicle, another nimble mind with baseball facts and the humor of their importance in the grand scheme of things.

First, check out the beautiful narrative of Wells Twombly in his introduction of the subject. ….

EPSON MFP image

From that point in the Twombly column, here’s how the writer and the Saturday, April 10, 1965 edition of his newspaper “Chronicled” those significant “firsts” in the history of the Astrodome. We do some paraphrasing here for the sake of brevity and our shorter attention spans of 2013:

Friday, April 9, 1965. Astrodome Firsts from the First Game Ever Played in the World’s First Domed Stadium:

7:44 PM: Astros starting pitcher Turk Farrell breaks off the first game pitch to lead off Yankees batter Mickey Mantle. It is low and inside for a ball and gets away from catcher Ron Brand. Brand retrieves it and runs it over to NL President Warren Giles for later presentation to the Cooperstown Hall of Fame where “it will be enshrined,” according to Wells Twombly, “in a glass case next to a vial containing bone chips from Joe DiMaggio’s heel and an umpire’s ear drum ruptured by Leo Durocher.”

7:46 PM: Mickey Mantle gets the first Astrodome hit, a single.

7:49 PM: Farrell slips the first Astrodome strike past Yankee second baseman Bobby Richardson.

7:51 PM: Richardson forces runner Mantle at second on an infield grounder. The Astros fail to get Richardson on a safe call at first for the first double play in Astrodome history, but the safe call does result in the first loud roar of air-conditioned boos.

7:53 PM: Roger Maris draws a low fast ball for ball four and the first walk in Astrodome history.

7:54 PM: Left fielder Al Spangler of the Astros catches “the first weather-proof fly ball.”

 7:57 PM: While the teams are going through the first change of sides, the first vendor to trip and fall with products in hand takes a dive on the steps in the strawberry-colored seating section, “dousing two customers with soda pop.”

8:12 PM: Frank Finch of the Los Angeles Times makes the first bad joke in an indoor baseball press box in a comment he makes on a juggled ball play by Joe Morgan that finally results in an out. Finch exclaims to all that “you (have to) score that play four-four-four-four-three because Morgan handled that ball four times.” How funny folks were back in 1965.

8:30 PM: Less than an hour into the first game, the first drunk is seen staggering through the new indoor press box. Want to guess who the first designated driver was that night? It was nobody. There weren’t any designated drivers back in 1965. Whoever the drunk was drove himself home. Or at least tried to.

8:40 PM: In the top of the sixth, with nobody on, Mickey Mantle slams the first home run in Astrodome history. It also produces the Dome’s first run and RBI, plus a 1-0, first in-progress deficit game under glass for the Houston Astros.

8:41 PM: Exactly one minute later, a fan makes the first clean bare hand catch of a foul ball hit into the stands.

8:51 PM: Rusty Staub reaches safely when his bunt stays fair, giving the Astros their first ever indoor bases loaded situation.

9:00 PM: Jimmy Wynn guns down Johnny Blanchard as the first indoor runner cut down at the plate by a bullet throw from center field.

10:22 PM: In the bottom of the 10th, Nellie Fox of the Astros gets the first pinch hit in indoor baseball history. It is a single to center that scores the winning run in a 2-1 victory for the Astros over the Yankees and, of course, the first win in indoor baseball history. Jimmy Wynn scored the fist winning run in Astrodome history.

That’s it. Unrecorded by Wells Twombly’s time stamp also are these other important firsts in Astrodome history from Game One:

First Astros Run – Turk Farrell

First Astros RBI – Rusty Staub

First Astros Single – Al Spangler

First Double – Walter Bond

First Triple – Ron Brand

First HBP – Roger Maris by Hal Woodeshick

First Stolen Base – Joe Pepitone

First Astros Stolen Base – Joe Morgan

First to Ground into Double Play – Rusty Staub, 4-6-3

First Error – Tony Kubek

First Winning Pitcher – Hal Woodeshick

First Losing Pitcher – Pete Mikkelsen

First “IN ORBIT” Notation on an Astrodome Homer – It was Mantle’s. The lead photo used here was described exactly as it was below the lead photo in the Houston Chronicle. No word if broadcaster Harry Kalas first used his eventually famous “that ball is in orbit” on Mantle’s first blast, but probably not. The famous Kalas-Call correctly homed in and came back out as “that ball is in Astros orbit!” Perhaps, Harry drew his inspiration from the  Chronicle’s “IN ORBIT” description beneath the Mantle picture and used it the following evening when Jim Beauchamp hit the first “Domer” home run for the Astros in the third inning of the next day’s first indoor afternoon game, and this time, against the Baltimore Orioles and lefty starter Jim McNally.

“Astros Orbit?” Who knows? The word “orbit” hung plainly in the Astrodome air back in 1965. Kalas could have as easily inhaled it with any breath he took on Friday, April 9th, and then exhaled it in the form of orbiting mucous matter on Saturday afternoon, April 10, 1965.

Have a nice weekend, Everybody!