HITTING
This Series will pit the home run against the single to the opposite field. The
Yankees have the power (and the glory): three of them—Roger Maris, Mickey
Mantle and Bill Skowron—hit more home runs this season than the entire Pirate
starting lineup. But the Pirates hit so many singles they equaled the Yankees
in run production. The Pirates are masters at what Broadcaster Mel Allen likes
to call "riding the curve to right": right-handed batters Don Hoak,
Roberto Clemente, Gino Cimoli and Dick Groat (if his recently broken wrist is
sufficiently healed) do it well. There are some Yankees who can do it too, of
course, just as there are Pirates who can hit home runs. Bobby Richardson,
Hector Lopez and Gil McDougald are good right-field hitters; Pittsburgh's Dick
Stuart can hit a baseball as far as anyone. And the Pirate left-handed
hitters—Rocky Nelson, Smoky Burgess and Bob Skinner—may make use of the short
right field at Yankee Stadium. Certainly the Yankees themselves do, and not
just the left-handed ones. A majority of the Yankee right-hand hitters can
reach those seats as well—Skowron, Mantle (when he is switched that way),
Lopez, Elston Howard and even Clete Boyer. Yankee pinch-hitting is powerful
too. If the Yankees fall behind, Casey Stengel will insert a barrage of heavy
hitters: Bob Cerv, Howard (or Yogi Berra, if Howard is the starting catcher
that day), John Blanchard and Dale Long, once the toast of Pittsburgh. Danny
Murtaugh cannot do this. If he starts his right-handed lineup ( Stuart, Cimoli
and Smith) he can use Nelson, Bill Virdon and Burgess as pinch hitters, or vice
versa, but the rest of his reserves are weak.
SLIGHT EDGE TO
YANKEES
PITCHING
The two off-days
will permit Pittsburgh's strong right-handers, Vernon Law and Bob Friend, to
start five and perhaps even six games between them, just as the Burdette-Spahn
combo did for Milwaukee three autumns ago. Both men have pitched magnificently
this season. A left-hander, either Wilmer Mizell or Harvey Haddix, will start
game three, the first one in Yankee Stadium. Left-handers have been effective
against the Yankees this season, so it is possible that if Mizell, say, beats
the Yankees in the third game, Haddix will pitch the fourth. When any of these
starters gets in trouble, Elroy Face will appear from the bullpen. Also
available for relief will be Fred Green and Joe Gibbon, left-handers, and a
face very familiar to old Yankees, Clem Labine.
Left-hander
Whitey Ford is still the Yankees' best, but he is no longer the game's best. He
requires four days rest between starts, so it is doubtful if he can pitch more
than twice during the Series. Art Ditmar has been the Yankees' big winner this
season and he will probably start the second game. After Ditmar come problems.
Stengel has a parade of pitchers as inconsistent as butterflies. Ralph Terry
pitched two straight shutouts recently, but earlier, in one spectacularly
ineffective stretch, he gave up 11 hits to 13 batters. Bob Turley seems too
careful these days and is not the man who beat the Braves two years ago. Bill
Stafford was pitching for Richmond in August. He has shown confidence and a
good fast ball. Stengel also has Jim Coates, Eli Grba, Ryne Duren and Duke
Maas, righties, and Left-handers Bobby Shantz and Luis Arroyo. The way Stengel
wheels and deals, all will probably see action.
DEFINITE EDGE TO
PIRATES
FIELDING
Position by
position, the Yankees and Pirates are as similar as any two teams in the
majors. Stuart, on his good days, is only an adequate first baseman. Nelson is
more polished. Skowron falls somewhere in between. Richardson and Mazeroski are
as good a pair of second basemen as ever made a pivot. Perhaps Kubek is not as
sure at shortstop as Groat is, but in seven games the difference should not be
important. If Groat cannot play, Schofield will not hurt a bit, mechanically,
though the Pirates will miss Groat's leadership on the field. New York fans
believe Clete Boyer can play third base as well as anybody—which is the way
Pittsburgh feels about Hoak. Both are excellent. If Gil McDougald, a veteran of
seven Series, plays third, the Yankees will lose a little defensively.
Neither Lopez nor
Skinner makes his manager happy with his fielding. Skinner will have the
unhappy experience of playing Yankee Stadium's eerie left-field shadows for the
first time. Lopez is familiar with the shadows, but that still doesn't seem to
help him much. If the Yankees are leading by a couple of runs in the late
innings, Stengel will remove Lopez and switch Kubek to left, thereby starting a
chain reaction that often puts Boyer at short, Richardson at third and
McDougald at second. Casey loves to juggle. The other outfielders, Mantle
against Virdon (or Cimoli) in center, Maris against Clemente in right, are all
good. Clemente is the best, with speed and a powerful arm.
The Yankees, with
Berra and Howard, have stronger catching than the Pirates, with Burgess and
Smith. Neither team steals many bases, so the catchers will not be under great
pressure.