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If you clicked on the info icon or the "Stats /
Notes / Bio" link, you've reached this page which
contains notes, memories, trivia and more about Mickey
Mantle. If you have anything to add to
this player's information, an interesting bit of trivia
or a personal memory or story about Mickey,
please feel free to share it with us by filling out the
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Facts, Trivia, Memories and More about Mickey Mantle
Show Mickey
Mantle's Uniform Number Progression
View career stats on BaseballReference.com
Notes
- Mickey was originally assigned #6 since he was seen as the next in line for
Yankee greatness after Babe Ruth (#3), Lou Gehrig (#4) and Joe DiMaggio (#5).
After a slow start however, he was sent down. By the time he returned,
Bobby Brown had returned from military service and with that, was given back the
#6 he had worn for the previous four years. Mickey was given #7,
previously worn that season by Cliff Mapes (traded to the Browns) and Bob Cerv
(demoted), and he has owned it ever since.
- "Earlier in the '51 campaign, with
[Cliff] Mapes the proud owner of number 7, Mantle was assigned number 6." - Yankees Scorebook & Souvenir Program (1990, "Retired Numbers: A Tribute to Yankee Greats", Bill Schulman.)
Trivia
Mickey hit six inside the park home runs in his career: |
Date |
Pitcher |
Team |
Career HR |
Season HR |
Where |
8/7/1953 |
Connie Johnson |
Chicago White Sox |
52 |
16 |
Yankee Stadium |
5/9/1958 |
Pedro Ramos |
Washington Senators |
209 |
2 |
Yankee Stadium |
5/20/1958 |
Dick Donovan |
Chicago White Sox |
211 |
4 |
Comiskey Park |
6/5/1958 |
Early Wynn |
Chicago White Sox |
215 |
8 |
Yankee Stadium |
5/12/1959 |
Cal McLish |
Cleveland Indians |
254 |
5 |
Yankee Stadium |
6/30/1961 |
Dick Donovan |
Washington Senators |
345 |
25 |
Yankee Stadium |
Mickey hit ten Grand Slams in his career: |
Date |
Pitcher |
Team |
Career HR |
Season HR |
Where |
7/26/1952 |
Ted Gray |
Detroit Tigers |
28 |
15 |
Tiger Stadium |
7/29/1952 |
Chuck Stobbs |
Chicago White Sox |
29 |
16 |
Comiskey Park |
7/6/1953 |
Frank Fanovich |
Philadelphia A's |
49 |
13 |
Connie Mack Stadium |
10/4/1953 (WS) |
Russ Meyer |
Brooklyn Dodgers |
Game 5 |
|
Ebbets Field |
5/18/1955 |
Mike Fornieles |
Chicago White Sox |
95 |
11 |
Yankee Stadium |
7/30/1956 |
Bob Lemon |
Cleveland Indians |
154 |
33 |
Cleveland Stadium |
5/2/1961 |
Camilio Pascual |
Minnesota Twins |
328 |
8 |
Metropolitan Stadium |
8/19/1962 |
Jerry Walker |
Kansas City Athletics |
298 |
24 |
Municipal Stadium |
6/18/1965 |
Mel Nelson |
Minnesota Twins |
464 |
10 |
Yankee Stadium |
7/26/1966 |
Marcelino Lopez |
California Angels |
492 |
19 |
Yankee Stadium |
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Memories
Harry G. from Tulsa, OK wrote: "Most famous athlete from Commerce, Oklahoma. But, the second most successful athlete from that tiny, coal mining town was Harry Gordon,Sr. In 1939 he ran track at Oklahoma A&M (OSU). Against the OU Sooners he ran the 1/2 mile, mile & 2 mile races. He won two firsts and a second - he coasted into 2nd place in the first race behind a teammate to save his energy for the later two races. He was also a member of the 4-Mile Relay that set a record at the infamous Drake Relays. That record held for a decade.
Yep, Commerce produced some stars!
Brooks W. from Endicott wrote: "I was very fortunate. Saw Mickey homer twice in one game on Old Timer's Day in August of '68 in a losing effort against the Twins.
My oldest brother, who was with me, also saw him hit his last grand slam against the Angels two years earlier in another Yankee loss, which unfortunately were too frequent in those later years.
Then, I got incredibly fortunate in 1974. One month before he was inducted into the HOF, he came to my hometown to appear at our local Pro-Am. My uncle was instrumental in getting DiMaggio and Mickey to attend. My uncle tended to Joe D and had my brothers and a dear family friend and me were Mantle's chaperones for two days. He was great with us, and so much fun. He wanted to hang with regular folks, go to your home and stay with real people, not the people that were tugging on his arm, trying to take him around to be seen with him.
Nearly 48 years later, it was one of the more memorable two days of my life."
Gordon from Greer, SC wrote: "The Yankees used to stop for a game in Meadowbrook Park in Greenville, SC after Spring Training on their way up North. When I was a kid my Uncle Jeff took me on the train from Greer to Greenville one year to see the Yankees and the Yankees were on that train. I loved Mickey and got to see him up close when he got off the train. I didn't get to meet him personally but I never forgot seeing him that day up close."
Randall from Tempe wrote: "I was four or so years old,
say 1954. I walked into the living room, and my dad was watching TV. "What's
that?" I asked. "Baseball." "Who's that?" "Mickey Mantle." "Mickey Mouse?!"
"No, that's Mickey Mantle." I became a Yankee fan that day, because I
thought that guy had something to do with Mickey Mouse. When I was ten or
eleven, and playing Little League, I read The Mickey Mantle Story as told to
Dick Schaap. Seemed like half the book was about Mick's knee operations.
Mickey must have had the worst knees in the history of the game, but played
on them for years. What a guy."
Joe G. from North Bergen, NJ wrote: "Loved him as a kid.
My friends and I always wanted to "be" mantle when playing any ball game on my block in the
Bronx on 169th St. and Shakespeare Ave. with my friends, Mike, Jerry, Fritz,
Anthony, James, David and Steve. I was born in 1956, the year Mick won the Triple
Crown & MVP. I went the to see the Yanks play and I cried when he left the game.
What a class act as a player, BEST BASEBALL PLAYER EVER IN MY EYES!"
Martin F. from Port Hueneme, CA wrote: "My First Intro to the Mick: April, 1956, I'm in the LC field Bleachers at an empty Yankee Stadium on a rainy weekday with my 8 year old friend Ray (I'm 7.) Mick gets up right handed. Ray says, "there he is." "Who," I ask. "Mickey Mantle...he hits homeruns." I say, "Oh, ok." First pitch: Mick hits a towering flyball over the auxilliary scorebord and into the bleachers next to the Yankee bullpen in RF. I remember watching him run the bases with his head down in the empty stadium and I'm thinking "Yep...he did what he was supposed to do." Then I found myself on my feet, yelling and clapping wildly, and like all of you, I never did stop. "He hits homeruns"...and runs faster than EVERYBODY. Long live the Mick."
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