Baseball's 'Hammerin' Hank' Aaron, who held career home run record, dies
at 86
Send a link to a friend
[January 23, 2021]
By Bill Trott
(Reuters) - Baseball Hall of Famer Hank
Aaron, the quiet, unassuming slugger who broke Babe Ruth's
supposedly unbreakable record for most home runs in a career and
battled racism in the process, died on Friday, the Atlanta Braves
announced. He was 86.
Aaron joined the Braves management to become one of the few
African-Americans in a baseball executive position after retiring as
a player in 1976 with 755 career home runs, a record unmatched for
more than three decades. Aaron died "peacefully in his sleep," the
Braves said in a statement.
His hitting prowess earned him the nickname "Hammerin' Hank," and
his power was attributed to strong wrists. He was somewhat shy and
lacked the flair of contemporaries Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle.
Instead, Aaron played with a smooth, under-control style that made
the game look so easy that some critics wondered if he was really
giving his best. But Aaron was fueled by a powerful inner drive as
he overcame an impoverished youth and racial hatred to become one of
the greatest and most consistent baseball stars of all time.
Tributes to Aaron poured in from the worlds of sports, entertainment
and politics, praising not only his achievements in baseball, but
his courage in confronting the racism that dogged him even at the
pinnacle of his career.
"He grew up poor and faced racism as he worked to become one of the
greatest baseball players of all time," former President George W.
Bush, who presented Aaron with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in
2002, said in a statement. "Hank never let the hatred he faced
consume him."
President Joe Biden likewise saluted Aaron as a transformative
athlete, saying, "Each time he rounded those bases - an astonishing
755 trips home - he melted away more and more of the ice of bigotry
to show that we can be better as a people and as a nation."
Aaron was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1982. His
profile on the hall's website notes that boxing legend Muhammad Ali
called Aaron "the only man I idolize more than myself." It quotes
Mickey Mantle as calling Aaron "the best baseball player of my era.
... He's never received the credit he's due."
Aaron played 23 major league seasons - the first 21 for the
Milwaukee and Atlanta Braves, and the final two for the Milwaukee
Brewers. He appeared in a record-breaking 25 All-Star games.
Aaron's pursuit of Ruth's ultimate home run record was one of the
top sports stories of the 1970s and generated intense media
coverage. He finished the 1973 season with 713 home runs - one short
of Ruth's record, which allowed drama to build for several months
before the 1974 season began.
The Braves opened that season in Cincinnati, and Aaron wasted no
time, hitting a home run in his first at-bat to tie Ruth's record.
A few days later, on April 8, fittingly at home in Atlanta, Aaron
broke the record when he drove a fastball from the Los Angeles
Dodgers' Al Downing over the left field fence for No. 715. As Aaron
trotted the bases at the tumultuous Atlanta Fulton County Stadium,
two fans broke through security to briefly join him.
In the run-up to breaking the record, millions of fans cheered
Aaron. Others jeered and some went even further. Bodyguards were
assigned in 1973 after Aaron and his family became the targets of
death threats and other harassment from racists who did not want a
Black man to break such a sacrosanct record held by the charismatic
Ruth.
Jackie Robinson, who was Aaron's hero, had integrated the major
leagues in 1947. Still, when Aaron arrived in 1954 the U.S. civil
rights movement had yet to build momentum. Aaron sometimes found
himself unable to stay in the same hotels or eat in the same
restaurants as his white teammates, some of whom ostracized him.
The drive for the home run title left scars on Aaron. In his 1991
autobiography, "I Had A Hammer," he described the final days of his
quest by saying, "I thought I had earned the right to be treated
like a human being in the city that was supposed to be too busy to
hate.
"The way I saw it, the only thing Atlanta was too busy for was
baseball. It didn't seem to give a damn about the Braves, and it
seemed like the only thing that mattered about the home run record
was that a nigger was about to step out of line and break it."
Because of the pressure and racial backlash, Aaron biographer Howard
Bryant told National Public Radio the historic home run was "not a
happy moment at all."
Aaron said he kept some of the hate mail he received to remind him
of the reality of racism.
[to top of second column] |
Scenes from the Hank
Aaron statue and the Atlanta Braves Monument Garden at Truist Park
home of the Atlanta Braves. Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports
The record-breaking season would be Aaron's last in Atlanta. Before
the 1975 season began, he was traded to the Brewers. The trade
allowed Aaron, then 40, to finish his Major League career in the
city where it began.
It also gave the Brewers, then a sixth-year expansion team, a
marquee player who could draw more fans to home games. Because the
Brewers were in the American League at the time, the aging star
could play as a designated hitter and avoid the chance of injuring
himself playing the outfield.
In 2015, Aaron told Milwaukee sportscaster Tom Pipines: "I came here
when I was 19 years old, and made a lot of mistakes, but I've never
once been in this city and the fans have booed me. They accepted me
for what I am and I'm just so grateful."
His career home run record stood until 2007, when Barry Bonds of the
San Francisco Giants broke it. Bonds, whose career was shrouded by
accusations of steroid use, finished with 762 homers.
Despite being passed by Bonds on the home run list, Aaron still held
major league records for runs batted in (2,297), extra base hits
(1,477) and total bases (6,856). He also was third in hits (3,771)
and games played (3,298), ranked fourth in runs scored (2,174) and
had a .305 lifetime batting average.
Aaron won the National League's Most Valuable Player award in 1957
when he helped the Braves to a World Series victory over the New
York Yankees, hitting .322, driving in 132 runs and blasting 44 home
runs.
Aaron led the National League in homers four times. He won two
batting titles, drove in at least 100 runs 11 times and scored 100
runs 15 times. He was elected to the Hall of Fame on Jan. 13, 1982.
"I hope they'll say Hank Aaron was a complete ball player who hit
some home runs and helped his team," he said.
Later, as a senior vice president with the Braves, Aaron fought
major league discrimination practices, particularly in front
offices.
Henry Louis Aaron was born in Mobile, Alabama, on Feb. 5, 1934. In
1997, the city named its minor league ballpark Hank Aaron Stadium.
In 1952, when he was 18, Aaron was playing shortstop for the
Indianapolis Clowns in the Negro League, and his .400-plus batting
average attracted major league scouts. The Braves, then playing in
Boston, signed him and he was a standout in two minor league
seasons.
Brought up to the Braves for spring training in 1954 after the team
had moved to Milwaukee, Aaron switched to the outfield and became
one of the game's outstanding defensive players as well as a feared
slugger. He moved with the team to Atlanta in 1966.
Aaron was called one of the greatest natural hitters of all time by
Hall of Famers Paul Waner and Rogers Hornsby, who both coached him
early in his career.
In addition to working for the Braves after his playing career,
Aaron owned fast-food restaurants and auto dealerships.
The father of four children, Aaron was divorced from his first wife,
Barbara, in 1971. In 1972, he married Billye Williams, co-host of an
Atlanta TV talk show.
In 1999 MLB established the Hank Aaron Award for the player deemed
the best hitter in both leagues.
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto and Peter Szekely in New York;
Writing by Bill Trott; Editing by Ken Ferris, Howard Goller, David
Gregorio, Matthew Lewis and William Mallard)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |