Site icon Baseball History Comes Alive

Tony Lazzeri Has One of the Greatest Days in Major League History!

Subscribe to Baseball History Comes Alive for automatic updates (sign-up block found in right side-bar)

As a Free Bonus for subscribing, you’ll get instant access to my two Special Reports: Memorable World Series Moments and Gary’s Handy Dandy World Series Reference Guide!

 Tony Lazzeri Photo Gallery
Click on any image below to see photos in full size and to start Photo Gallery:

Tony Lazzeri Has One of the Greatest Days in Major League History! 

“Tony Lazzeri was a money player almost without equal and one of the smartest athletics ever to patrol the diamond.” – New York Times columnist Arthur Daley

My friend, author Larry Baldassaro, who happens to be a regular reader of our Baseball History Comes Alive website, has turned out another gem to add to his collection of outstanding baseball books. His most recent effort is Tony Lazzeri: Yankee Legend and Baseball Pioneer (University of Nebraska Press, 2021). I’ve got a feeling this book will come to be regarded as the definitive book on the great Hall-of-Famer.

Author Larry Baldassaro with Yogi Berra

I’m planning to write a detailed review of the book, but before I do, I wanted to say a few words about Lazzeri’s great day, one of the greatest in baseball history, which was detailed in Larry’s book.

Talk about being “overshadowed!

Whenever I write about Tony Lazzeri, I always like to mention how hard it must have been to get noticed when you batted in the same lineup with teammates Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Joe DiMaggio. That’s some pretty heavy-duty competition for the baseball spotlight! The only person who may have had it worse was Dom DiMaggio, brother of American icon Joe DiMaggio, and teammate and co-outfielder with Ted Williams.

And as someone who played alongside the two Yankee greats for many years, “Poosh ‘Em Up” Tony Lazzeri, born 117 years ago on December 6, 1903, knew what he was saying talking about when he said this about his two famous teammates:

“They didn’t get along. Gehrig thought Ruth was a big-mouth, and Ruth thought Gehrig was cheap. They were both right!”

But while Tony may have been overshadowed, he had an excellent career in his own right that landed him a spot in Cooperstown, even though he had to deal with epilepsy his entire life. Author Baldassaro, in his outstanding earlier book, Beyond DiMaggio, provided a nice summary of Lazzeri’s career:

“Tony Lazzeri is one of the best ‘forgotten’ players in Major League history. He was a key player on a Yankee team that won six pennants and five World Series in his twelve years in New York. In fact, Lazzeri’s home run and RBI statistics between 1926 and 1937 put him in the company of the game’s most elite sluggers of that time. In that same span, Lazzeri hit more home runs than all but six American Leaguers: Ruth, Gehrig, Foxx, Simmons, Averill, and Goslin. Lazzeri’s name stands out in that list because as a second baseman, he played a position typically associated with defensive prowess…Lazzeri was the third most dangerous hitter in one of the most potent lineups in the history of baseball and one of the most feared clutch hitters of his era.”

Tony’s Great Day

Not many fans know that one day back in 1936, Tony had one of the greatest days in major league history. At Shibe Park, almost eighty-five years ago (May 25, 1936), the Yankees routed the A’s 25-2. Tony Lazzeri had a pretty good game that day. He went 4-5 with three home runs (two being Grand Slams, and a third solo shot), a triple that just missed being the fourth home run, a walk, and four runs scored. He became the first major leaguer to hit two grand slams in the same game, and established a new American League record with 11 RBIs in a single game that still stands (the major league record is 12, by Jim Bottomly and Mark Whitten). In addition, that month, he also set records for most home runs in three consecutive games (6) and four consecutive games (7).

Tony Lazzeri’s Outstanding Career

Tony Lazzeri played 14 years (1926-1939) in the major leagues and put up solid numbers. Over his career, he hit .292 with 178 home runs and 1192 RBIs. He was part of the famed 1927 “Murderers’ Row” along with Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Bob Meusel. As a Yankee, he averaged 79 runs, 14 home runs, 96 RBIs, and 12 stolen bases, including seven seasons with over 100 RBI and five seasons batting .300 or higher (including a high of .354 in 1929).

Tony Lazzeri passed away in 1946 at the age of 43. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1991.

Stay tuned for a lot more about Tony Lazzeri in my forthcoming view of Larry Baldassaro’s great new book: Tony Lazzeri: Yankee Legend and Baseball Pioneer

Gary Livacari 

Photo Credits: All from Google search
Exit mobile version