The Three Alou Brothers Make History: All Three In The Same Outfield!

The Three Alou Brothers Make History: All Three In The Same Outfield!



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The Three Alou Brothers Make History: All Three In The Same Outfield!

Yesterday, September 15, was the 53rd anniversary of something unique in baseball history: The three Alou brothers: Felipe, Matty , and Jesus, all played together in the same outfield for the Giants. Three brothers in the same outfield had never happened before. In the game, played on Septembe 15, 1963 at Forbes Field, the Giants defeated the Pirates 13-5 in front on 18,916 fans. The game featured Hall-of Famers Willie Mays, Orlando Cepeda, and Willie McCovery for the Giants; and Roberto Clemente and Bill Mazerowski for the Pirates.

The three Alous played together in eight games in 1963. Felipe, then 28, was a regular outfielder for the Giants; Matty, 24, was a defensive replacement and pinch hitter who started only six games; and Jesus, 21, was a September call-up. They played in the same outfield for a few innings in three games in September. In spite of some lingering baseball mythology, they never all started a game together.

Jesus made his debut on Sept. 10, and it was uniquein its own right: Manager Al Dark had the Alou brothers bat consecutively in the eighth inning, Jesus and Matty as pinch hitters before Felipe came up. The Alous went 0 for 3 against the Mets’ Carlton Willey.
On Sept. 15, the historic day, Felipe played all three outfield positions, and Matty and Jesus joined him in the outfield as late-inning substitutes. Two days later, Felipe started again and Matty and Jesus moved into the outfield late in the game. On Sept. 22, they played in the outfield together one last time, with Felipe again starting and ultimately playing all three positions before Matty and Jesus flanked him in the late innings. The Alous all played in the same game one more time, on Sept. 25, when Felipe started and his brothers pinch-hit.

The next season Felipe was traded to the Milwaukee Braves. The brothers all played at least 15 seasons in the major leagues, but there were no more all-Alou outfields!

Felipe was the best of the Alou brothers with 2,101 hits from 1958-74. Matty had 1,777 hits from 1960-74 and Jesus had 1,216 from 1963-79. The Alous, some of the first ball players to come from the Dominican Republic, played a combined 47 seasons. Matty Alou passed away in 2011.

-Gary Livacari

Photo Credits: From New York Times article on the Three Alou’s in the same game: http://bats.blogs.nytimes.com/…/the-myth-of-the-alou-brot…/…

Information: Excerpts edited from the same source

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.

5 Comments

  1. Kathleen “KC” Carter · August 17, 2018 Reply

    Thank you for posting this info. I remember being home in Battle Creek, Michigan, and watching a Giants game on national tv, so it must have been on a Saturday. All 3 Alou brothers played the outfield together late in the game. I think one of them made a routine catch. I was 10 years old at the time. Great memories! I was thinking about that game tonight, but I couldn’t recall the year. Thanks, again, for your post. I enjoyed the information and the photos.

  2. Chris Albert · May 9, 2020 Reply

    that’s Juan Marichal (not Cepeda) and, perhaps, Rico Carty in the photo.

  3. Martin Price · May 31, 2023 Reply

    When I was growing up in the 60’s & 70’s near Detroit, I played baseball in the summer and hockey in the winter. I was a left handed batter and thrower and was small for my age. I looked for under sized players in both sports to pattern my game after. In baseball, it was 1966 NL batting champion and Pirates center fielder Matty Alou. In hockey it was Henri Richard with Montreal, they only player to ever to be a winner on 11 Stanley Cup teams. When I asked my high school baseball coach why he cut me in 11th grade (after I went 4 for 4 against his summer league team less than a year before), he said I was too small. I still had a Matty Alou baseball card from the late 60’s that showed Matty was 5′ 8″ and 160 lbs and brought it to Gym class the next day. I asked my coach, what about him? Is he too small?

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