In those pre-cable days, there were not nearly as many games
broadcast on television. In fact, the only day you could really depend on a
televised Phillies game was Sunday. My memory of the game is also in black and
white, because, though color TV had been invented, very few households that I
frequented had a color set.
I watched the first three innings of the game at home with
my dad on our old console Philco TV, while simultaneously getting dressed for
our Father’s Day trip for Sunday dinner at my grandparent’s house. There was no
excitement about the game yet, just a typically good outing from Bunning. After
three innings, my dad, mom, two sisters and brother all climbed into the copper-colored
Ford station wagon for the trip from Levittown to the Juniata Park section of
Philly.
Interstate I-95 had just opened from Bristol down to Castor
Avenue in Philly, so the ride that formerly took an hour or more, had been
reduced to about 45 minutes - good thing. We listened to three innings of the
game in the car and by then things were getting exciting. We knew by then that
Bunning had a perfect game. Not that the announcers were any help. Holding to
long held tradition, announcers Bill Campbell, By Saam and Richie Ashburn
refused to mention what was happening.
You would get little clues, like “Looking up at the scoreboard,
we see nothing but zeroes for the Mets.” Or, “Bunning is really pitching a
classic today.” But no one said the words “no-hitter” or “perfect game.”
In the dugout, Bunning did not stand on tradition. He was
chatting about the perfecto from the fifth inning on. Johnny Callison (who
would homer in the game) said, “You don’t talk about a no-hitter right? But
[Bunning] was going up and down the bench telling everybody what was going on.
Everybody was trying to get away from him, but he was so wired he would follow
us around.”
I clambered out of the car and ran into my grandparents’
house, waving a quick, “Hello”, to my grandmother in the kitchen and making a
beeline for the den, where I knew I would find my grandfather sitting is his
red leather Morris chair, smoking a Lucky Strike, and watching the Phillies
game. Sure enough as I entered the smoke filled room, he said, “You better sit
down, kid, Bunning’s got a no-hitter going.”
It’s a perfect game, Dad.” My father said, joining me on the
couch.
“Right. How about that.”
In those days, perfect games were so rare that few people
were fully aware of them. Even the home plate umpire, Ed Sudol, did not realize
Bunning was pitching a perfect game until he was told so by Mets announcer,
Ralph Kiner, after the game. “Do you mean I umpired a perfect game?”, he asked.
It had been eighty-four years since a perfect game in the
National League. That one was pitched by a young right-hander named John
Montgomery Ward for the Providence Greys. In 1956, Don Larson of the Yankees
famously pitched a perfecto in the World Series, but in the American League the
last regular season perfect game was in 1922. In 1964, perfect games were the
rarest of all baseball feats.
On the television it was the bottom of the seventh and
Bunning was 9 outs away. Pesky Ron Hunt of the Mets ripped a ball to third that
was fielded nicely by rookie Richie Allen and Bunning was 8 outs away. Hunt’s
smash was one of only two hard hit balls by the Mets all day. In the fifth,
while I was in the car listening on the radio, Phils’ second baseman, Tony
Taylor, made the play that saved the day. Met catcher, Jesse Gonder, hit a hard
two-hopper to Taylor’s left. Tony dived, snagged the ball, leapt to his feet
and threw out Gonder at first.
Bunning made easy work of the Mets in the eighth. In the
ninth he knew he would face two left-handed pinch hitters, George Altman and
John Stevenson. Altman was a powerful, dangerous hitter. Bunning hoped to get
Altman before Stephenson. This is how Bunning told it after the game.
I knew if I got
Stephenson up there with two out, I had it. I knew I could get him out on curve
balls, no matter what. Altman, I wasn’t so sure of. I didn’t know if I could
still jam him with the ball.
Bunning retired the first hitter in the ninth, former Phil Charley
Smith, on an easy pop-up to defensive replacement Bobby Wine at short. Then, as
he hoped, George Altman strode to the plate. My grandfather muttered a quick, “Uh,
oh.” I was too nervous to speak.
At this moment my grandmother yelled back from the kitchen, “Dinner’s
ready.” Her call was greeted by a chorus of male voices young and old, “Not
now!”
Altman launched a high fly ball to right that Johnny
Callison chased, but it drifted into the stands, foul. Strike one. Altman fouled off
the next pitch. Strike two. Bunning next delivered a curve ball that looked
like it stopped half way to the plate. Altman swung hard and early and missed.
Five curve balls later John Stephenson became Bunnings 10th strikeout
victim and the perfect game was complete.
Bunning slapped his pitching hand to his mitt, while what Mets
announcer Bob Murphy called his “happy teammates” came out to congratulate him.
The celebration was mild by today’s standards, but it was clear that Bunning
knew what he accomplished.
And so did I. I watched a perfect game, even if only on TV,
on Father’s Day, with my father and my grandfather.
We all adjourned to dinner with plenty to talk about.
To top it off, later that evening we all sat around the TV
to see Jim Bunning, local hero, appear on the Ed Sullivan Show. Things were
good in Phillies land.
A little later in the year of 1964, things were not so good,
but that is a story for another day.
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