Where Have You Gone Andy Van Slyke?
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Among those on hand Saturday at the Byham Theater to view the long-lost kinescope of Game 7 of the 1960 World Series were (from left): former Pirates players Dick Groat, Hal Smith, Bob Oldis, Bob Friend and Bill Virdon, and series MVP Bobby Richardson of the New York Yankees.
"If the Pirates decided to trade me, I would quit. I would not play for another team, only the Pirates." Roberto Clemente as told by Vera Clemente to the crowd at the Byham Theater watching Game 7 of the 1960 World Series.
It's hard to know where to start with the broadcast of Game 7 of the 1960 World Series. There are so many interesting and unique aspects to watching a previously lost piece of baseball history that I think I could watch the entire three-hour broadcast two more times and find something new to write about every time.
The game itself is a time capsule. Some of the players look like high school football coaches in 2010. They're burly but not ripped like today's players and they look pretty ridiculous in their saggy flannel uniforms. Some of the other players are skinny little beanpoles. The few guys that don't fit either mold -- the lithe Roberto Clemente (who in 1960 was built an awful lot like Andrew McCutchen is built in 2010) or Maris and Mantle (who are both built more like modern players) -- really stand out. The other thing that stands out is the quickness of the player's hands, which I think is because they're every bit as quick as modern players' hands even though the players themselves don't look nearly as athletic. Don Hoak fielding a groundball and whipping a throw to Bill Mazerosi at second and Maz just catching it is a thing of beauty.

Everyone knows about Maz's homer. Most Pirate fans probably know about Hal Smith's homer, which was the single biggest hit in the game. A few people know about Dick Groat's groundball off of Tony Kubek's throat that starts the Pirate rally that inning. That still doesn't start to capture the frantic pace of the game's last four innings. The Pirates take a comfortable 4-1 lead into the sixth, when Vern Law's bad ankle starts to give out and Elroy Face comes in and promptly serves up a three-run homer to Yogi Berra. What if the Pirates don't come back? That Berra home run might be a signature moment for him; a clutch hit to cap off a legendary career. The Yankees keep building their lead in the eighth and it's 7-4 before the Pirates come up to bat in that inning. It's one thing to see that in a line score, but another entirely in the context of a game. That's a hard lead to overcome on a Tuesday in July against the Nationals, much less in October against the 1960 Yankees. But the Pirates get their improbable rally with Virdon's grounder off of Kubek's throat and Clemente's infield hit and Smith's giant home run that Mel Allen says will be remembered forever but was promptly wiped from everyone's memory before the hour was even over. After Smith's home run, they cut to the Byham audience giving the 80-year old Smith a standing ovation and Smith is grinning like he'd just hit the home run in again 2010. I'm getting goosebumps just thinking about it.

All of the great things leading up to Maz's homer make the home run one of baseball's iconic moments. It's the one part of the game that everyone knows everything about, and in this context it's kind of anticlimactic. It's like opening a wondeful surprise Christmas gift, then opening something you really want, but that picked out yourself and watched someone buy for you. The game is about the home run, but the best part of it all is seeing everything about that isn't the home run.

And that's the best part about the entire presentation. Times are awful for Pirate fans right now, but the Pirates will always be the team that toppled the invincible Yankees in 1960. The Pirates will always be the only team Roberto Clemente played for and the only team he ever wanted to play for. A cynic would say that in 2010 fans root for laundry, but that's not true. I root to be able to experience my own personal 1960 World Series. Right now the Pirates are a terrible 105-loss team, but they're still Pittsburgh's team and they're Roberto Clemente's team and Willie Stargell's team and Bill Mazeroski's team and Honus Wagner's team and Andy Van Slyke's team; they're still the team that shocked the Yankees in 1960, that toppled Walter Johnson in 1925, that beat the incredible Orioles' rotation in 1971, that overcame a 3-1 deficit as a Fam-a-lee in 1979. And even though they haven't won anything of significance in 18 years, they're the team that I grew up watching with my dad and my uncles and my brothers and my friends and that makes them my team, too. And it may take five or ten or 18 or 31 more years, but the Pirates will eventually get back to the top of baseball and when they do, that chapter of Pirate history will be my chapter of Pirate history. And I think it will all be worth it.
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