Pirates right fielder Roberto Clemente is robbed on a 430-to-450-foot putout. With two on, two out and no score in the 6th, Dodgers centerfielder Duke Snider goes to considerable lengths to frustrate his favorite right fielder. Frank Finch of the Los Angeles Times reports: âClemente clouted an âextra-baserâ which Snider caught with one hand near the center-field wall.â Clemente, however, has little cause for complaint. A mere two innings earlier, he himself performed a bit of âarmedâ robbery with Norm Larker playing the hapless victim though Larker, for his part, would claim itâs the umpire who robbed him. Frank Finch continues: âRound Four started well enough for L.A. when Tom Davis got a bad-hop single and raced to third on Norm Larkerâs single to right. However, Bob Clementeâs rifle peg to Rocky Nelson nipped Larker trying to get back to first base. Larker snorted and stomped like a Brahma bull, getting the bumâs rush from umpire Ken Burkhart for throwing the tantrum. From the press box, it appeared that Larker had gotten back in time, but he had no excuse for the play even being close.â Clementeâs âlethal weaponâ once again proves pivotal two innings later. George Lederer of the Long Beach Independent writes: âStan Williams learned how costly his [7th-inning] error was when John Roseboro led off the 8th with a single. Roseboro, batting for Williams, lined Vern Lawâs first pitch into the right field corner and was held to a single only by Roberto Clementeâs quick retrieve and bullet throw to second. Trailing by three runs instead of one, manager Walter Alston could not call for the bunt that otherwise would have been in order. Maury Wills, leading off in Alstonâs revised lineup, promptly grounded into a double play to wipe out the Dodgersâ last serious bid.â
Pirates right fielder Roberto Clemente is robbed on a 430-to-450-foot putout. With two on, two out and no score in the 6th, Dodgers centerfielder Duke Snider goes to considerable lengths to frustrate his favorite right fielder. Frank Finch of the Los Angeles Times reports: âClemente clouted an âextra-baserâ which Snider caught with one hand near the center-field wall.â Clemente, however, has little cause for complaint. A mere two innings earlier, he himself performed a bit of âarmedâ robbery with Norm Larker playing the hapless victim though Larker, for his part, would claim itâs the umpire who robbed him. Frank Finch continues: âRound Four started well enough for L.A. when Tom Davis got a bad-hop single and raced to third on Norm Larkerâs single to right. However, Bob Clementeâs rifle peg to Rocky Nelson nipped Larker trying to get back to first base. Larker snorted and stomped like a Brahma bull, getting the bumâs rush from umpire Ken Burkhart for throwing the tantrum. From the press box, it appeared that Larker had gotten back in time, but he had no excuse for the play even being close.â Clementeâs âlethal weaponâ once again proves pivotal two innings later. George Lederer of the Long Beach Independent writes: âStan Williams learned how costly his [7th-inning] error was when John Roseboro led off the 8th with a single. Roseboro, batting for Williams, lined Vern Lawâs first pitch into the right field corner and was held to a single only by Roberto Clementeâs quick retrieve and bullet throw to second. Trailing by three runs instead of one, manager Walter Alston could not call for the bunt that otherwise would have been in order. Maury Wills, leading off in Alstonâs revised lineup, promptly grounded into a double play to wipe out the Dodgersâ last serious bid.â