B6 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 28, 2021 SAY HEY! By Charles Apple | THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW Seventy years ago, the man who would become one of the greatest Major League Baseball players of all time, Willie Mays, hit his first home run. What’s more: The 20-year-old slugger for the New York Giants hit that dinger off the all-time left-handed wins leader, Warren Spahn. Mays had gone professional as a 17-year-old, playing for the Negro League’s Chattanooga Choo-Choos and the Birmingham Black Barons. As soon as he graduated high school, the New York Giants signed him and sent him to the minor leagues — first to Trenton, N.J., and then to Minneapolis. Mays hit .477 in 35 games with the Minneapolis Millers, so the Giants called him up to the big show in May 1951. Mays went hitless in his first three games against the Phillies at Shibe Park in Philadelphia. But at home against the Boston Braves in his 13th Major-League at-bat and with two outs in the first inning, Mays took Spahn long over the left field roof of the Polo Grounds. Mays before his first game with the New York Giants. Even sitting out the better part of his second season and all of his third after being drafted, Mays would go on to become one of baseball’s biggest stars, acquiring the nickname “the Say Hey Kid.” Mays would play for 22 seasons for the Giants and the New York Mets. indicates led BOLD the league Willie Mays’ career major league stats YEAR TEAM G AB R H 3B HR RBI SB BA SLG TB 1951 NY Giants 121 464 59 127 5 20 68 7 .274 .472 219 1952 NY Giants 34 127 17 30 4 4 23 4 .256 .409 52 1953 Did not play — Military service 1954 NY Giants 151 565 119 195 13 41 110 8 .345 .667 377 1955 NY Giants 152 580 123 185 13 51 127 24 .319 .659 382 1956 NY Giants 152 578 101 171 8 36 84 40 .296 .557 322 1957 NY Giants 152 585 112 195 20 35 97 38 .333 .626 366 1958 SF Giants 152 600 121 208 11 29 96 31 .347 .583 350 1959 SF Giants 151 575 125 180 5 34 104 27 .313 .583 335 1960 SF Giants 153 595 107 190 12 29 103 25 .319 .555 330 1961 SF Giants 164 572 129 176 3 40 123 18 .308 .584 334 1962 SF Giants 162 624 130 189 5 49 141 18 .304 .615 382 1963 SF Giants 157 596 115 187 7 38 103 8 .314 .582 347 1964 SF Giants 157 578 121 171 9 47 111 19 .296 .607 351 1965 SF Giants 157 558 118 177 3 52 112 9 .317 .645 360 1966 SF Giants 152 552 99 159 4 37 103 5 .288 .556 307 1967 SF Giants 141 486 83 128 2 22 70 6 .263 .453 220 1968 SF Giants 148 498 84 144 5 23 79 12 .289 .488 243 1969 SF Giants 117 403 64 114 3 13 58 6 .283 .437 176 1970 SF Giants 139 478 94 139 2 28 83 5 .291 .506 242 1971 SF Giants 136 417 82 113 5 18 61 23 .271 .482 201 1972 Giants/Mets 88 244 35 61 1 8 22 4 .250 .402 98 1973 66 209 24 44 0 6 25 1 .211 .344 72 2,992 10,881 2,062 3,283 140 660 1,093 338 .302 NY Mets 22 seasons Was named National League MVP in 1954 and 1965 No. 6 all-time Major League Baseball career home run hitter Won 12 consecutive Golden Gloves as an outfielder from 1957 to 1968 No. 7 in career runs No. 9 in games played Made 24 All-Star Game appearances No. 12 in career hits No. 12 in career RBIs .557 6,066 Was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979 No. 1 in career putouts by an outfielder: 7,095 Mays’ most iconic moment Mays would have other great moments as well. For example, he would hit four home runs and drive in eight runs against the Braves in Milwaukee on April 30, 1961. Two years later, he’d sign a new contract, becoming the highest-paid player in Major League history. During his time in the Army — playing with the Army team at Fort Eustis in Newport News, Va. — Mays learned what he called “the basket catch.” He’d hold his glove usually at waist-level and allow the ball to fall into it naturally. It made for a dramatic moment. Mays would put this unique skill to use in the top of the eighth inning of Game 1 of the 1954 World Series when he made an over-the-shoulder catch near the outfield wall of the Polo Grounds, robbing Vic Wertz of the Cleveland Indians of a long hit that should have scored two runners. Mays would go on to score the winning run in the 10th inning of that game and the Giants would win the World Series. Mays would retire after the 1973 season, would serve as a coach for the Mets for six years and then rejoin the Giants as General Manager in 1986. In 2017, Major League Baseball would name its World Series MVP award after Mays. “The Catch”: Sept. 29, 1954 Sources: Baseball-Reference.com, Major League Baseball, National Baseball Hall of Fame, BleacherReport.com, “On This Day in Baseball History” by the Baseball Time Machine Mays celebrated his 90th birthday earlier this month. ALL PHOTOS FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS