A little before my time:

There were only 18 home runs hit over the right field roof at Forbes Field in the 61 years it served as the Pittsburgh Pirates home field with Babe Ruth hitting the first one, and believe it or not I witnessed two of them, both by Willie Stargell. And not only witnessed them, I was sitting in the right field upper deck cheap seats both times and watched Stargell's blasts soar over my head and over the roof. Pretty amazing when you think about it.
Forbes Field had quite unusual dimensions, 365 feet down the left field line, 457 feet to center, but just 300 feet down the right field line. I don't know if anyone ever hit a home run over the 457 mark in center as it was the deepest of its kind of any major league park. Right field was very short and there was a lower deck and then an upper deck and then the roof, so it still took a prodigious blow to make it over the roof. Stargell hit 7 of the 18 blasts that made it over the roof.
The section of the left field wall that Bill Mazeroski's winning home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series went over is still standing in Schenley Park, very close to where Forbes Field was originally. That was the first Series title for the Pirates since 1925 and the city went wild. Pictures show almost all White people celebrating exuberantly but peacefully downtown.
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There were only 18 home runs hit over the right field roof at Forbes Field in the 61 years it served as the Pittsburgh Pirates home field with Babe Ruth hitting the first one, and believe it or not I witnessed two of them, both by Willie Stargell. And not only witnessed them, I was sitting in the right field upper deck cheap seats both times and watched Stargell's blasts soar over my head and over the roof. Pretty amazing when you think about it.
Forbes Field had quite unusual dimensions, 365 feet down the left field line, 457 feet to center, but just 300 feet down the right field line. I don't know if anyone ever hit a home run over the 457 mark in center as it was the deepest of its kind of any major league park. Right field was very short and there was a lower deck and then an upper deck and then the roof, so it still took a prodigious blow to make it over the roof. Stargell hit 7 of the 18 blasts that made it over the roof.
The section of the left field wall that Bill Mazeroski's winning home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series went over is still standing in Schenley Park, very close to where Forbes Field was originally. That was the first Series title for the Pirates since 1925 and the city went wild. Pictures show almost all White people celebrating exuberantly but peacefully downtown.
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They had the great Roberto Clemente, who was a tremendous right fielder and who indeed did gun down a few baserunners at first base. I was at Forbes Field to see Clemente get his 2,000th hit, and went to Three Rivers Stadium to see him going for his 3,000th at the very end of the 1972 season. We thought he had hit a double initially for his 3,000th but the official scorer changed it to an error. Clemente did get his 3,000th hit the next day, which turned out to be his last one as he died that offseason in a plane crash on New Year's Eve 1972 while on a relief mission to Nicaragua following a devastating earthquake in that country.At that distance the Pirates must have always had a Right Fielder with a cannon to gun down the sliders into first.
