With a sixth-inning single to go with a double and his
milestone home run, Mantle was just a triple shy of hitting for the cycle. His bat
and leadership by example were proving more essential than it ever had been
before, as the Bronx Bombers, in a grim portent of the future, was fending off
a younger, hungrier Baltimore Orioles squad.
In third place and 4 ½ games out in mid-August—and having
endured a much-publicized bus “harmonica incident” between infielder Phil Linz
and manager Yogi Berra—the Yankees would go 30-13 through the rest of the
season to secure their fifth straight World Series berth. But they won the
pennant by only one game.
Mantle was not the only reason the team was able to survive: rookie pitcher Mel Stottlemyre, for instance, was
virtually lights out when called up in October, and Roger Maris’s return to
something like peak offensive form and late-season replacement for Mantle in
centerfield took much of the burden off his power-hitting teammate.
But Mantle’s consistency and dominance (35 homers, 111
RBIs, .303 batting average, 1.015 OPS) throughout the season were recognized by sportswriters now in a
way that finally matched how his admiring teammates had felt for years. When
the season was over, he finished second in the voting for Most Valuable Player,
surpassed only by Orioles third baseman Brooks Robinson.
Just
as the team fed off Mantle’s offensive brilliance in 1964, they collapsed when their
string of injuries began to mirror his own the following season. Maris, catcher
Elston Howard, shortstop Tony Kubec, and starting pitcher Jim Bouton would join Mantle on the
injured list in 1965. The team would not make it back to the World Series again
until 1976.
It turned out that 1964 would be the last great year for the 32-year-old Mantle. His power, batting average, and speed steadily declined over the following four seasons, only staying on because the Yankees implored him to lend his leadership to a team transitioning to youth. When he retired following the 1968 season, he was mortified that his career batting average had dipped below .300.
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