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tycobb420
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Get Startedcmlfactor said:I think we forget sometimes that they used heavier bats back then. If a pitcher throws a 95mph fastball and a guy connects with it just right why couldn't it go 610 ft? It's all physics..and hell for all we know the bat was corked...we can't exactly go back in time and saw his bat in half. But to say it was impossible for a ball to be hit 610 feet, well we can't.
tomdalton22 said:cmlfactor said:I think we forget sometimes that they used heavier bats back then. If a pitcher throws a 95mph fastball and a guy connects with it just right why couldn't it go 610 ft? It's all physics..and hell for all we know the bat was corked...we can't exactly go back in time and saw his bat in half. But to say it was impossible for a ball to be hit 610 feet, well we can't.
If a roided up player in the 1990's couldn't hit one 500' I doubt a 195 lb player from 1915 could hit one over 600'. Plus, pitchers weren't providing that kind of power back then. I doubt they were throwing 95...probably less than 90
tycobb420 said:tomdalton22 said:If a roided up player in the 1990's couldn't hit one 500' I doubt a 195 lb player from 1915 could hit one over 600'. Plus, pitchers weren't providing that kind of power back then. I doubt they were throwing 95...probably less than 90
Sometimes when calculating homeruns, they don't count where it lands, but where it stops. Steve Balboni once hit a ball several miles...how? It landed in the back of a train.
[color=#006400 said:Mitch[/color]]Home runs, even the ones measured now-a-days at 400+, only go as far because the batted ball gets stopped. By the seats, signs etc. I've seen some that get measured at 440 but if the back of the stadium wasn't there, would have kept going over 500.
Maybe Heilmann just got a hold of one
Also if I remember correctly home runs, I forget which era, were measured on how far it would have went if it wasn't stopped by part of the stadium. They don't do that anymore.
MI_Thumb said:I thought I remembered McGwire hitting a couple estimated at 600+ ft. while he was in Oakland.
Was in an SI article about Cecil Fielder, and for comparisons they were saying as long as Cecil's bombs were McGwire still out-distanced him.
But honestly, it still only counts as 1 no matter how far it goes.
tycobb420 said:MI_Thumb said:I thought I remembered McGwire hitting a couple estimated at 600+ ft. while he was in Oakland.
Was in an SI article about Cecil Fielder, and for comparisons they were saying as long as Cecil's bombs were McGwire still out-distanced him.
But honestly, it still only counts as 1 no matter how far it goes.
That sounds vaguely familiar.
I knew the Mick hit one further than the 565 foot blast.
and Kaline hit a 500 foot plus while at Southern High in Baltimore, there is a marker for it.
Here, this is about Mickey Mantle's 734 foot home run and how the distance was calculated.
http://www.grandlakevisitor.com/mmtenlongest
[color=#006400 said:KalineCountry[/color]]
tycobb420 said:That sounds vaguely familiar.
I knew the Mick hit one further than the 565 foot blast.
and Kaline hit a 500 foot plus while at Southern High in Baltimore, there is a marker for it.
Here, this is about Mickey Mantle's 734 foot home run and how the distance was calculated.
http://www.grandlakevisitor.com/mmtenlongest
tycobb420 said:[color=#006400 said:KalineCountry[/color]]
734 is just ridiculous!
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