The Shot Heard Around The World
In 1951, both the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants finished the regular season with identical 96-58 records in the race for the National League pennant which meant a three-game playoff. That the play-off had been forced at all was a minor miracle as the Giants, under tough talking former Dodgers manager Leo “The Lip” Durocher won 37 of their final 44 games to claw back a deficit that had been a massive 13 ½ games in mid-August.
Brooklyn won the toss for home advantage and opted to play the Game 1 at Ebbets Field which meant the remaining two games would be fought out at the Giant’s Polo Grounds in Upper Manhattan. The Dodgers’ plan backfired as the Giants took the first game 3-1 with a two run home run by Glasgow born Bobby Thompson off Brooklyn starting pitcher Ralph Branca. But the Dodgers avenged this defeat when the tie moved north to the Polo Grounds with a 10-0 complete game shutout by former World War II paratrooper Clem Labine, thus setting up the decisive game at the Polo Grounds on 3 October 1951.
The decider was touted as a pitching battle between the Dodgers 20 game winner Don Newcombe and Sal Maglie who had won 23 games for the Giants. It was a tight contest, with the Dodgers taking the lead in the first inning and the Giants unable to draw level until the bottom of the seventh inning. The game then exploded into life. In the eighth, Maglie conceded 3 runs and the Dodgers moved into the bottom of the ninth inning with what looked like an unassailable 4-1 lead. Newcombe, like his opposite number Maglie was feeling the affects of a long, hard season and attempted to retire from the game only to be persuaded to stay on the mound by the influential Jackie Robinson. However, his tired arm then proceeded to give up two singles and a double, allowing the Giants to score, making it 4-2. With Mueller and Lockman of the Giants on base, Dodgers manager Charlie Dressen decided to relieve Newcombe with Ralph Branca. It was a puzzling move as Bobby Thomson was next up to bat for the Giants and had scored several home runs off Branca that year, including the winning home run in Game 1, just two days earlier. What followed is possibly the most famous play in baseball’s illustrious history. Branca’s first pitch was a fastball and a strike for 0-1. His second was also a tactical fastball straight at Thomson’s body, but the batsman shifted back and pulled a line drive into the left field stands. With two players on base, the three run home run had won the game for the Giants and was described famously and ecstatically by the normally calm and collected Giant’s radio commentator Russ Hodges:
Branca throws…there’s a long drive, it’s gonna be, I believe…THE GIANTS WIN THE PENNANT!! THE GIANTS WIN THE PENNANT! THE GIANTS WIN THE PENNANT! THE GIANTS WIN THE PENNANT! Bobby Thomson hits into the lower deck of the left-field stands! The Giants win the pennant and they’re going crazy, they’re going crazy! Ohhhhh-oh!!!”
The most famous home-run in history was immortalised as the “Shot Heard around the World” after an article in the New York Daily News described it as such in a report on the game the following day. Unfortunately for the Giants, the momentum didn’t carry and they lost the World Series to Joe DiMaggio and the New York Yankees in six games.

Thomson's famous line drive