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Ted Williams' 3 HRs highlight a record setting performance

ON THIS DATE (July 14, 1946) ... The performance that Ted Williams had in the All-Star game five days ago, must have been just a warm-up, because today he unloaded his most prolific day as a member of the Red Sox. He smashed three home runs in one game, along with a single, in the opening game of a doubleheader at Fenway Park. The Sox won both ends, 11-10 and 6-4, thus widening their league over the New York Yankees who were beaten twice by Detroit to 11 games.

The Kid became the 56th player in the history of baseball to have three home runs in a single-game. Bobby Lowe, Lou Gehrig and Chuck Klein are the only players to have hit four. Yet it is doubtful if any of his predecessors dominated those games the same way Ted did in today's opener. With his 24th, 25th, and 26th home runs, he figured in nine of the eleven runs the Sox scored. He had eight RBI, his all time high, to break his tie with Bobby Doerr and take the lead in that department with 82.

The Indians were leading 5-0 when Ted slammed a Steve Gromek fastball against the back of the visiting bullpen wall, with the bases loaded, in the third inning. It was Ted's second grand slam this year and the sixth of his career. Cleveland had forged ahead again 8-6, when Ted led off the fifth by hitting a Don Black change-up between the right field grandstand extension and the bleachers, with this one bounding high and majestically into the upper regions of the grandstand.

Once more the Tribe was out in front 10-8, when Kid settled it once and for all in the eighth inning. Lee Culberson and Johnny Pesky were aboard with two outs, when Ted pulled Joe Berry's curve down the right-field line, a few rows into the grandstand.

During the first game, the Indians employed their usual unorthodox shift against Ted by crowding four infielders on the right side, a move that robbed Ted of his fifth hit in his first at-bat of the game. When he came up, with nobody on base in the third inning, he had secondbaseman Jackie Conway play in short right field, and left fielder George Case playing only a foot behind the dirt of the infield. Ted could have grabbed a gift hit by merely pushing a bunt toward third. Instead he took up the challenge and hit directly to Boudreau. The Indians used the same alignment in the sixth inning, but ended up giving him his 95th walk of the year and again his 96th in the seventh inning.

 

F   E   N   W   A   Y     P   A   R   K

 

Game #1

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

 

R

H

E

 
 

CLEVELAND INDIANS

4

0

1

0

3

1

1

0

0

 

 

10

18

3

 
 

BOSTON RED SOX

0

0

5

1

1

0

1

3

x

 

 

11

16

0

 

 

W-Jim Bagby (3-3)
S-Tex Hughson (3)
L-Joe Berry (1-2)
Attendance - 31,581

2B-Boudreau (4)(Clev), Case (Clev), Black (Clev),
Hegan (Clev), York (Bost), DiMaggio (Bost)

 3B-Conway (Clev), Hegan (Clev)

HR-Boudreau (Clev), Keltner (Clev),
Williams (3)(Bost)

 

 

F   E   N   W   A   Y     P   A   R   K

 

Game #2

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

 

R

H

E

 
 

CLEVELAND INDIANS

0

0

1

0

0

0

1

1

1

 

 

4

8

0

 
 

BOSTON RED SOX

0

3

0

0

0

2

1

0

x

 

 

6

9

0

 

 

W-Bill Zuber (2-1)
S-Dave Ferriss (3)
L-Red Embree (6-7)

2B-Edwards (Clev), Williams (Bost), Russell (Bost)

HR-Case (Clev)