WHITEY FORD [SABR Bio] broke Babe Ruth’s most cherished record in 1961. Ruth had set the record for consecutive scoreless World Series innings by a pitcher in 1918 with 29-2/3. Ford passed him in the 1961 Fall Classic vs. CIN when his scoreless innings streak reached 30. He extended it to 33-2/3 in 1962 vs. SFG and saw the streak come to an end when Willie Mays scored in the bottom of the 2nd inning of the 1st G of the 1962 WS. Ruth was known to say that his record of 60 HR in a season would not stand the test of time. Nobody remembers any such claims about this WS streak. Ford (not Ruth) owns the career World Series records for most wins, innings pitched, games started and strikeouts. Ford’s career World Series records: 10 pitching victories; 146 innings pitched; 22 games started; and 94 strikeouts.
Ford not only set the record for most consecutive World Series Game One starts. He then tied that record six years later. He was the team’s game one starter in every World Series 1955-1958, becoming the first pitcher in history to start four consecutive WS game ones. He repeated the feat 1961-1964. His career winning percentage is among the best ever in major league history - Career W% = .690, 4th all-time, #1 among pitchers with 3,000 IP. He won the Cy Young Award and World Series MVP in the same season - WS MVP 1961. CYA 1961, the 1st ALBLTL to win the award. Leads all Yankees in career Wins (236), Shutouts (45), IP (3,1701/3) & Games started (438 [Tied w/Andy Pettitte]). His was the sixth uniform number retired by the Yankees’ franchise. His #16 was retired 03-Aug-1974.
Whitey’s career ERA is the lowest of any pitcher since the deadball era (3,000 IP min). Career ERA of 2.75 is the best since 1921. The first nine regular-season decisions of his career were victories. He posted a tidy 2.06 ERA during his nine game winning streak 17-July and 25-Sept-1950. His Hall of Fame manager called him “Slick”. Casey Stengel thought he was the slickest of moundsmen.
By the time we all made it to W&MC’s the rain was really coming down. There was 6” inches of water in the streets. I had to make two trips out to the car, and was completely soaked when I got back to the house. The hurricane remnants were passing through Atlanta, bringing flooding and scattered tornadoes. We didn’t see much wind, but the roads were really bad. I didn’t want to take 20 west and 285 north home, so we went MLK to Northside to Howell Mill to 75 north. The northern part of town didn’t get as much rain, but in our neighborhood one creek was flowing over the street.
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