April 17, 1951, 75 years ago: Opening Day at Yankee Stadium. There are 2 significant debuts on this day. Yankee co-owner Dan Topping had owned the football edition of the Brooklyn Dodgers, whose public address announcer was a professor of speech at St. John's University in Queens. Topping hired him, and he held the Yankee PA job for the next 57 seasons. His name was Bob Sheppard. Yankee Hall-of-Famer Reggie Jackson would dub him "The Voice of God."
The 1st name he introduced was that of the leadoff hitter for the visiting Boston Red Sox, their center fielder, Dom DiMaggio, brother of the Yankees' biggest star and center fielder, Joe DiMaggio. Making his major league debut that day, in right field, but being groomed to be Joe's successor in center, was a 19-year-old switch-hitter from the northeastern corner of Oklahoma, wearing Number 6. His name was Mickey Mantle.
The kid was overwhelmed by New York. Attendance on Opening Day was 44,860. His native Ottawa County was home to just 31,000. As he would say, many years later, "New York was tough on me. Playing baseball was the easy part."
Easy? Maybe if you're among the most talented baseball players who have ever lived. Batting against Red Sox starter Bill Wight, he grounded to 2nd base in the 1st inning, popped up to 3rd in the 3rd, singled home a run and later scored himself in the 6th, and flew out against Mickey McDermott in the 8th.
Jackie Jensen, later to win a Most Valuable Player award with the Red Sox, hit a home run for the Yankees. Joe DiMaggio went 1-for-4, Yogi Berra 1-for-2 with an RBI, Phil Rizzuto 0-for-3. For the Red Sox, Dom DiMaggio went 2-for-3 with a walk, and Ted Williams went 1-for-3 with a walk. Vic Raschi went the distance, and the Yankees won, 5-0.
Mantle struggled a bit that season, and even got sent down to the minors, but recovered, before getting hurt in the World Series. The rest is history... and myth.
Sheppard would later say that Mantle was his favorite name to announce. Mantle told him, "I got goose bumps when you announced my name." Sheppard told him, "So did I."
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April 17, 1951 was a Tuesday. These other Major League Baseball games were played that day:
* The New York Giants beat the Boston Braves, 4-0 at Braves Field in Boston. As with the other teams in the National League, they wore special uniform patches in honor of the League's 75th Anniversary.
* The Brooklyn Dodgers lost to the Philadelphia Phillies, 5-2 at Ebbets Field. Robin Roberts outpitched Carl Erskine. Jackie Robinson hit a home run, and he, Duke Snider and Gil Hodges each had 2 hits, but it wasn't enough. The Dodgers started the season one game behind the Giants, and would end the season the same way. Little did anyone know how that would come about.
* The Washington Senators beat the Philadelphia Athletics, 6-1 at Shibe Park in Philadelphia. It was the start of the 51st season for the A's, and their 1st regular-season game with a manager other than Connie Mack: Jimmy Dykes. As with the other teams in the American League, including the Yankees, they were wearing special uniform patches in honor of the League's 50th Anniversary.
* The Pittsburgh Pirates beat the St. Louis Cardinals, 5-4 at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh. Stan Musial went 1-for-2 with 2 walks, but the Cards lost, anyway.
* The Cleveland Indians beat the Detroit Tigers, 2-1 at Briggs Stadium in Detroit. (It was renamed Tiger Stadium in 1961.) Bob Lemon outpitched Hal Newhouser, and both went to the Baseball Hall of Fame. Newhouser would join Lemon on the Indians' 1954 American League Pennant winners.
* The Chicago Cubs beat the Cincinnati Reds, 8-3 at Wrigley Field in Chicago.
* And the Chicago White Sox beat the St. Louis Browns, 17-3 at Sportsman's Park in St. Louis. Bill Veeck, who had built the Indians into the 1948 World Champions, had bought the Browns, and this would be the season in which he tried everything to bring fans in, including "Grandstand Managers Night" and letting a 3-foot-7 Eddie Gaedel come to bat.
Football was out of season. But the NBA Finals were underway. The Rochester Royals led the New York Knicks, 3 games to 2. The next day, the Knicks would win Game 6. But on April 21, in overtime, the Royals would win Game 7. As the Rochester Royals (1952-57), the Cincinnati Royals (1958-72), the Kansas City-Omaha Kings (1973-75), the Kansas City Kings (1976-85) and the Sacramento Kings (1986-2022), they have not been back to the NBA Finals since. The Knicks would not get so close to their 1st NBA Championship again until 1970.
And Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Finals was played. The Toronto Maple Leafs beat the Montreal Canadiens, 2-1 at the Montreal Forum, with Ted "Teeder" Kennedy scoring the winning goal, 4:47 into overtime. Unlike a lot of Teds and Teddys who were actually born Edward, including the future U.S. Senator Edward Moore Kennedy, this Ted Kennedy actually started out with the name Theodore.
All 5 games in this Finals would go to overtime. Sid Smith won Game 1 for the Leafs, Maurice "the Rocket" Richard won Game 2 for the Habs, Harry Watson won Game 4 for the Leafs, and, on April 21, the same day that the NBA Finals were decided, Bill Barilko, a hard-hitting but little-scoring young defenseman, won Game 5 and the Cup with an overtime goal.
Four months later, Barilko and a friend would take a fishing trip with a friend, an inexperienced pilot. The plane went off course, crashed, and wasn't found for 11 years.
Also, actress Olivia Hussey was born on this day.









