Mickey Mantle has become synonymous with injuries. Roger Maris and 61 home runs are also synonymous, but fans and the media rarely remember how often Roger was injured.
It started innocently enough and wasn't even reported in the newspapers. In the second game of a twin bill against the Minnesota Twins, on Sunday, June 20, 1965, Roger Maris, sliding into home plate, jammed his right hand against the home plate umpire's shin guard. Roger was in the Yankees' lineup the next few games, but in the nightcap of a double header against the Kansas City Athletics, he left the game. Roger did not return until August 18 as a pinch hitter, after missing 49 games. And that was just the start of all the intrigue.
Roger Maris started only 40 games in 1965. During the third week of the season, he pulled a hamstring and missed 26 games. Then came the wrist injury sliding into home plate on June 20. Roger didn't start another game after June 28. It was eventually discovered that there was a bone chip the doctors could not find causing the problem. Rest did not help, forcing surgery at the end of September, and the surgery revealed the chip.
In 1960, Roger's first year with the Yankees, he slid hard into second base in a game near the end of the season, bruising his ribs. It cost him 15 games. The next two seasons, 1961 and 1962, were Roger's only healthy ones as a Yankee. In 1963, he missed almost the entire second half of the season with back problems, playing only 90 games. He missed 20 games in 1964 with leg injuries. In 1966, Roger complained that his hand was sore as he struggled at the plate, batting only .233 with 13 home runs and 43 RBIs. The Yankees questioned Roger for complaining. It was now over between the Yankees and Roger.
In December, 1966, the Yankees traded the player who still holds the American League single season home run record to the St. Louis Cardinals for a nondescript third baseman with the equally nondescript name of Charlie Smith. It was an insult to Roger, who left New York a very angry individual. After the trade to the Cardinals, it was discovered that Roger had played most of the 1966 with a broken hand that the members of the medical community responsible for his well being had not properly diagnosed.
Roger Maris was a fine baseball player, but not a great one. He could run, throw, field, and hit, but for one season, he WAS a great player. "Everything clicked for me. My swing was in a perfect groove. If I had hit under the ball a fraction of an inch more, a lot of those homers would have been pop ups. If I'd hit a fraction of an inch higher, a lot would have been grounders or gone into fielders gloves. Instead, I was hitting the ball perfectly."
Roger’s good friend Mickey Mantle has become synonymous with injuries and what might have been. Roger Maris and 61 home runs have also become synonymous, but fans and the media rarely remember how often Roger was injured. Mention 1963 and Mickey Mantle to baseball fans. The response is usually, “Oh, yes, Mickey caught his foot in the outfield fence in Baltimore and missed most of the season.” But bring up 1963 and Roger Maris and invariably, the response is that Roger had a bad season, which he did. He hit the same .269 in 1963 that he hit in 1961, but with only 23 home runs. Why? Because he played in only 90 games.
Roger Maris has become much more of a fan favorite in recent years. His record is appreciated more today than a few short years ago for obvious reasons that do not need elaboration. How wonderful it would be for Roger Maris' legacy and for baseball, if Alex Rodriguez were to make a serious run at the single season American League home run record in the next few weeks, or in the next few years.