A Bitter Stan Williams Recalls His Role In “The Worst Inning In Dodger History,” October 3, 1962!

A Bitter Stan Williams Recalls His Role In “The Worst Inning In Dodger History,” October 3, 1962!



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 A Bitter Stan Williams Recalls His Role In “The Worst Inning In Dodger History,” October 3, 1962!

“I don’t like the Dodgers, and they don’t like me. They have completely divorced me over the years, and I pull against them every night.’’ –Ex-Dodger, Stan Williams

Pitcher Stan Williams remembers the fateful inning like it was yesterday, although it happened 56 years ago this Fall.  Here’s the setting:

It was the best-of-three playoff series between the Dodgers and the Giants. The 1962 National League pennant was on the line. The stakes couldn’t have been higher as the winner would go to the World Series. The loser would have six months at home to brood about it. Both teams had finished the regular season with identical 101-61 records. Now the playoff series was also tied, one game apiece; and so it all came down to Game Three at Dodger Stadium.

Stan Williams with the Yankees.

The Dodgers held a 4-2 lead as the top of the ninth inning unfolded. They had Ed Roebuck on the mound and were just three outs away from their second trip to the World Series in four years. Dodger Stadium was electrified as the anticipation of another pennant near at hand set in among the excited fans. 

(In the featured photo above, we Stan Williams, third from left with Dodger teammates, including Don Drysdale, Pete Richert, Sandy Koufax, and Johnny Podres.)

But wait! A single, a ground out, and a walk loaded the bases with one out for the Giants. The dangerous Willie Mays was next; and, true to form, he delivered with a run-scoring single. Suddenly it was 4-3.

That brought manager Walt Alston out of the Dodger dugout. He called for 6-foot-5 inch starter Stan Williams to close out the game, “saving” Don Drysdale for the World Series. First batter Orlando Cepeda wasted no time and hit a sac fly. Just like that, the two run lead had vanished and the game was tied at four. Mays then advanced to second on a wild pitch to Ed Bailey, leaving first base open. A hush fell over the stunned crowd…

Alston then ordered an intentional walk to Bailey, just a .147 hitter against Williams.  But the decision didn’t sit well: “First base was open,” Williams later recalled, “but I knew I owned this guy. So I called out Johnny Roseboro and we agreed we would tell Walt to let me pitch to him.”

There was only one problem. Looking into the Dodgers’ dugout, Williams and Roseboro couldn’t find the manager: “He was apparently standing up in the tunnel having a cigarette. We couldn’t find him, so we couldn’t get him to change his instructions.’’ Williams had no choice but to follow orders. He issued the intentional walk to Bailey, reloading the bases.

That brought up Jim Davenport, and with him came the nightmare at-bat Stan Williams has never forgotten. With the count 2-1, Williams proceeded to throw ball three and ball four, walking Davenport on five pitches, forcing in a run, and giving the Giants a 5-4 lead.

Then another run scored on an error, making it 6-4. After Billy Pierce closed out the Dodgers with a perfect ninth, suddenly the Giants had an improbable 6-4 victory and the 1962 pennant. The Dodgers? They were heading home, having just snatched a bitter, stinging defeat from the jaws of victory.

For most of the Dodgers’ early years in Los Angeles, Stan Williams was a mainstay on an outstanding rotation that featured Hall-of-Fame greats Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale, plus Johnny Podres. In his five years as a Dodger, Stan went 57-46 (.537) with a 3.48 ERA. In 1959, he literally pitched them into the World Series, closing out a 12-inning playoff win against the Braves with three scoreless innings. Over his 14-year major league career, he posted a 109-94 (.537) record, with a 3.48 ERA.

Stan Williams is often remembered for the five pitches he threw to Jim Davenport, but he deserves a much better fate. Surely there was blame enough to go around. Alston made some questionable decisions. The poor positioning of second baseman Larry Burright may have cost a potential double play.

Over the years, Stan Williams, now 81, has been consistently snubbed by the Dodgers, having been invited to only one old-timers event and no fantasy camps. He believes the Dodgers want to separate themselves from the memory of that fateful inning. He also feels the Dodgers never forgave him. “I eventually got over it, but they never did.”

When contacted about Williams’ claims, the Dodgers denied the charges: “In Dodger history, Stan Williams is one of the great pitchers and a big contributor to some great teams, and he’ll always be part of our family. We’ve got the greatest respect for his accomplishments.’’

Three batters…five pitches…one nightmare inning 56 years ago. It left an indelible scar on Stan Williams, turning him against the Dodgers, the team for which he pitched so well, and blemishing the career of an outstanding pitcher.

Baseball, like life, is sometimes unfair…

Gary Livacari

Photo Credits: All from Google search

Information: Excerpts edited from article on Stan Williams in LA Times by Bill Plaschke, August 25, 2018. statistics from Baseball-Reference.com

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I'm a baseball historian who also enjoys writing. My forte is identifying ballplayers in old photos, and my special interest is the Dead Ball Era.

6 Comments

  1. Kerry · August 28, 2018 Reply

    Hi Gary,

    Another first rate article on a subject on which I knew nothing. Many thanks for your insights, and for restoring this piece of baseball history. Much appreciated!

  2. Dennis burright · April 9, 2021 Reply

    Hello all Larry Burright is steel in great shape working in yard every day , dodgers have not asked him to old timer Games in 20 years when he helped Tom lasorsa to the chalk

  3. Mark Walker · April 10, 2022 Reply

    Great photo of five Dodger pitchers, but you need to fix the caption. It’s Johnny Podres, a Dodger icon for winning the “It’s Next Year” Game 7 of the 1955 WS — not Johnny Pesky, a Red Sox infielder. And yes, the “maybe” player is Pete Richert. Anyone know where this photo was taken?

    • Gary Livacari · April 10, 2022 Reply

      Thanks for the catch… not sure how that got past me and no one else caught it. Anyway it’s corrected, and, yes, I know Johnny Pesky was a RS infielder!

  4. Mark Walker · April 10, 2022 Reply

    Answered my own question: Polo Grounds. Surprising, since the Giants had left in 1958. But the Mets played here their first two seasons, ’62 and ’63. A second great photo was taken that day of the Dodgers infielders. I imagine one was also taken of the outfielders, but I haven’t seen it.

    I see that you had Podres’ name correctly in the story. Hope you can fix the caption.

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