Don Larsen pitched one whale of a Major League Baseball game back on Oct. 8, 1956.
He was throwing for the New York Yankees in that year’s World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers. He threw a perfect game. Twenty-seven batters came to the plate; they made 27 outs.
It was picture perfect.
Larsen died on New Year’s Day at the age of 90. Media have reported that Larsen pitched the “only perfect game in World Series history.”
I want to put that feat into its proper perspective. Not only did he throw the only perfect game, he threw the only World Series no-hitter ā¦ period! Do you get where I’m going with this? No-hitters themselves are worth noting, even if runners reach base on a walk, or a fielding error.
The very notion that Larsen’s feat was even more expansive than a “perfect game” is worthy of saluting as the New York Yankees legend is laid to rest.