Yogi Berra: Baseball’s Original Mr. Clutch

Yogi Berra: Baseball’s Original Mr. Clutch



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We’ve all heard that Yogi Berra was a “clutch hitter,” but what exactly does that mean? Is there a way to quantify it? In today’s essay, Steve Falco examines that question and comes away with proof that Yogi was indeed just as good as we always thought. -GL

Yogi Berra:

Baseball’s Original Mr. Clutch

I was struck by an AP headline in October during last year’s World Series which went like this: “Mr. Clutch Riley Comes Up Big Again, Braves Win Game Three.” The article went on: “Austin Riley, the Braves’ third baseman, keeps coming up with one clutch hit after another on baseball’s biggest stage.” It then mentioned Riley’s walk-off hit in Game One of the NLCS against the Dodgers, and his go-ahead hit in Game Six which helped propel the Braves to the World Championship. And Riley’s big hit in Game Three of the World Series put Atlanta ahead. No doubt Austin Riley is an exciting young player, and he came through on baseball’s biggest stage, but for me growing up in the fifties and sixties there was only one Mr. Clutch and that was Yogi Berra of the New York Yankees.

I’m not sure when or how Yogi got that moniker, but a closer examination of Yogi’s career confirms that he earned it. What does it mean to be a clutch hitter? In simple terms, it means coming through at the plate in an important time during a game, and even more so in an important game. It answers the question, “who do you want up when the game’s on the line?” The answer to that question was always Yogi Berra. But how can you measure such a quality? Did Berra really deserve to be called Mr. Clutch?

After doing a deep dive in Baseball-Reference.com some remarkable statistics can be uncovered. Berra, a .285 lifetime hitter, actually batted even better, .292 in the seventh through ninth innings. And he batted an incredible .307 in late and close games (which is defined by the seventh inning or later when his team is tied,

Yogi Berra

ahead by one, or the tying run is at least on deck) and with a .531 slugging percentage. So, there is no doubt that Yogi, throughout his career, was a clutch hitter.

But what about hitting in important games? Well in baseball there are no more important games than those of the World Series. And on that stage, Yogi’s performance was truly exceptional. He appeared in fourteen Fall Classics throughout his nineteen-year career batting .274, but if you focus in on Berra’s peak years from 1953 through 1957 when he was age 28-32 his performance was nothing short of amazing. In the four World Series in that time frame (Cleveland won the AL pennant in 1954) Berra’s batting average was a stunning .378 with a slugging percentage of.516, all while catching for some of baseball’s greatest World Series pitchers like Allie Reynolds, Vic Raschi, Whitey Ford, and of course perfect-game hurler Don Larsen.

As for key hits in the Series, ol’ #8 had plenty.

1952 Game Six versus Brooklyn:

The Yanks were down 3-2 in the Series and behind 1-0 in the seventh when Berra blasted a home run to tie the game which New York would go on to win and then eventually beat the Dodgers in Game Seven for the World Series victory.

1956 versus Brooklyn:

Everybody remembers Larsen’s Game Five perfect game for which Berra called the signals, but Yogi also wielded a hot bat throughout that seven-game series blasting three home runs. He hit a grand slammer in game two and in the vitally important game seven, Berra hit two, two-run homers in his first two at-bats to propel New York to an easy 9-0 victory.

And even when he made outs there was incredible drama. Berra was always described as a tough out. After all, a clutch hitter by definition would be a tough out. An underappreciated aspect of Yogi’s game was the fact that he almost always put the ball in play. In other words, he was really tough to strike out. Berra was only rivaled by such great sluggers as Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams for his ability to hit for power and still rarely strikeout. Clutch hitters at the very least put the ball in play even if they make an out and ol’ # 8 made two of the most dramatic outs in World Series history.

1955 Game Seven versus Brooklyn:

The Yankees were down 2-0 in the bottom of the sixth and having great difficulties against the Dodgers’ young phenom pitcher, Johnny Podres. With men on first and second and no one out the Yanks finally had a rally going. Yogi came up in the

Game saving catch by Sandy Amoros off bat of Yogi Berra

clutch situation and put the ball in play with a long, slicing flyball to the leftfield corner. A for-sure game-tying double. But Sandy Amoros, the Dodger left fielder, made a spectacular one-handed running catch, then wheeled, fired in and doubled Gil McDougald off first. The rally was over, and the Dodgers went on to win the game 2-0 and their first World Series.

1960 Game Seven versus Pittsburgh:

The top of the ninth, with New York down 9-8, one out and men on first and third, Yogi came to the plate with the game on the line and smashed a hot ground ball down the first baseline which was stabbed by Pirate first baseman Rocky Nelson who had been holding the bag with Mickey Mantle on first. Nelson immediately stepped on the bag to put out Berra and needing one more out to win the Series, he wheeled to throw to second to get Mantle. But in a brilliant base-running move Mantle swerved back to first avoiding Nelson’s tag. The run scored from third and the game was tied. A clutch out by Berra was aided by some amazing clutch base running by Mantle. Unfortunately for the Yanks, Mazeroski hit his famous home run in the bottom of the ninth.

Such was a recap of Yogi Berra’s clutch World Series performances.

But even if Yogi Berra was such a clutch hitter, what about all the other great hitters in baseball? Did they somehow fall short in dramatic situations despite their storied careers? Well, as might be expected, such is not the case. A closer look at Berra’s slugging contemporaries shows that they too performed well in the clutch. In late and close games Willie Mays hit .306, Ted Williams hit .320, and Mickey Mantle hit .323. Berra’s .307 in late and close games does however surpass other Hall-of-Fame catchers like Roy Campanella .284, Johnny Bench .274, and Carlton Fisk .265.

So, however you want to slice it, Yogi Berra will always be Mr. Clutch to me and his immense legion of baseball fans.

Steve Falco

References:  Baseball-Reference.com, The Baseball Almanac.

Photo Credits: All from Google search

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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. Joan Tumbleson · February 4, 2022 Reply

    Hi Gary:

    Yogi Berra! One of the names that Brooklyn Dodger fans came to hate. I say this only because of the constant defeats we fans suffered at the hands of those “Damn Yankees.” Ooh yes. Damn Yankees wasn’t just a Broadway musical; it was two words we muttered after all but one World Series.

    But, talent, sportsmanship and good humor are things that cannot be denied. Yogi Berra wasn’t just a great ball player, he was a great competitor. He played his heart out for his game and his team. God bless him.

    Sincerely,

    Joan

  2. Steven Falco · February 4, 2022 Reply

    I can understand your sentiments, Joan. But as a Yankee fan he was my guy.

  3. michael keedy · February 4, 2022 Reply

    Like Joan I’m a die-hard Dodger who grew up hating the @#$&^ Yankees, and actually believed that Mel Allen was the network’s Voice of the World Series (and Gillette its permanent sponsor). But.

    We must give Yogi his due: When Casey was asked who was the most valuable player in the Yankees’ lineup, he said, “I never go to war without my man,” or words to that effect. By which he meant Yogi Berra.

    He was an honest-to-goodness champion in every respect.

    Best regards,

    Michael

  4. Tom Hine · February 4, 2022 Reply

    I recall the Yankees came to Cleveland for a big series in, I think ’58 or ’59, and listening to the game (announcers Jimmy Dudley and Bob Neal). Late in the game, with runners on, Mickey Mantle came to the plate and the Tribe elected to walk him and pitch to the following batter, No. 8.

    The outcome, for Cleveland, was not brilliant.

    Days later my dad was still fuming and muttering and complaining about the folly of the move. “Walk Mantle so you can get to Berra?!?” he kept asking no one in particular, shaking his head.

  5. Bill Schaefer · February 7, 2022 Reply

    Steve, nice article. And you’re so right, The Yog was a feared clutch hitter, often taking one off his ear and rifling it down the line for a game winning double. Teddy Ball Game would only swing at pitches in his sweet zone-and draw the walk instead.

    Berra had three MVP’s but you could make a case for a fourth: In 1950, Yogi hit .322 with 28 HR, 124 RBI, .915 OPS, 192 hits and 318 total bases. And he struck out only 12 times !

    Teammate Phil Rizzuto won the MVP that year, batting .324 with 200 hits and an OBP of .418. His best year as the spark plug SS in the Yankee infield. But it may also have been Berra’s best season.

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