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Sj-hypocycloid
I have dabbled in sportswriting over the years (1991-1997, and again in 2007), enjoying two stints covering (stringing) High School sports for my local newspaper in South Jersey. That was a great experience and also a great deal of fun.

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Hank Aaron: 34 Years Since 715

by Sj-hypocycloid
created April 08, 2008, last edited November 15, 2008
15
Vote

When I was in second grade, I did a book report about Hank Aaron. I told my class about his 715th home run, hit on April 8, 1974, off Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Al Downing. I gave a statistical rundown of this great player, and knowing me, I'm sure I drew an "in action" picture of Hammerin' Hank.

Now that the 34th anniversary of this momentous homer is here, I pause to reflect.

That record, and Aaron's eventual total of 755 homers seemed unassailable to me as I grew up watching baseball. It just seemed that nobody would stick around long enough to challenge it. Year after year, this thought was further emphasized as great home run hitters like Mike Schmidt and Reggie Jackson retired well short of the mark.

Aaron never hit more than 47 homers in a season. He just consistently produced decent numbers throughout the years. He hit for average (lifetime .305 BA), and, in 1973, even managed a 40 homer season at age 39. He ended the 1973 season at 713, needing only one homer to tie. He hit number 714 on April 4th off Cincinnati Reds pitcher Jack Billingham.

And even into baseball's steroid era, the record lived on. Until Barry Bonds came along. He now holds the record, but he has no team, and he also has little to no credibility among the crankier baseball fan base, of which I consider myself.

I remember as a fan how incensed I was when Mark McGwire passed Mantle, Schmidt, Jackson and then Harmon Killebrew on the all-time career homer list. Thankfully, he didn't get to pass Frank Robinson or Willie Mays.

I can only imagine how Aaron must have felt as his record was eclipsed by Bonds. He must have been dismayed at the very least. He endured unimaginable hate mail and death threats simply for hitting home runs. As much as that record probably cost him emotionally, I wish there was some way to put him back on top.

In my mind, anyway, he is still on top. Even if the record books won't show that anymore.

Hank Aaron, the one and only Home Run King.
Hank Aaron, the one and only Home Run King.

Congratulations, Hank Aaron. You were one of the best, and on this anniversary of your great achievement, I, as a baseball fan and purist, salute you. To me, you are still the Home Run King.

Source: Mostly my memory...and this link for fact checking.

Originally Posted on southjersey-stillers-phillies.blogspot.com on April 7th.


Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
TheSportsAppleAll-American
452 days ago
Score 6+-
Do you think most fans still hold Henry Aaron as the alltime Home run champion in their mind even though Bonds passed him? I generally beleive that Maris' 61 is still record for home runs in a season even though it has been surpassed quite a few times
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JuTMSY4Legend
452 days ago
Score 2+-
to be honest, i think of them as 2 different records... But i guess if someone like Griffey Jr. catches fire and hits at least 716 (let alone something like 775 to beat bonds) I'll have a hard to reconciling the whole thing...same goes with Double-Play-Rod...as they were part of the same era (guilty or not)
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TheSportsAppleAll-American
452 days ago
Score 2+-
yeah its going to be an ongoing debate as to what was legit and what was not during the course of the steroid era. I guess any record that is set can be up for debate as to whether the user was clean or not. Honestly, even as a yankee fan, who knows if Arod has always been clean? I just beleive that McGwire, Sosa, and Bonds shouldn't hold any prestigious hr records. Then again, i can't say 100% that Aaron, Ruth, Mantle, and anyone else ever to hit a ton wasn't doing something illegal. I guess my point is we will never know about anyone. It will all be speculation and its a shame in a sport like baseball were numbers and records mean to much to the sport and to the fans.
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JuTMSY4Legend
452 days ago
Score 2+-
what's worse is McGwire...

People bitch and complain about Bonds during the run...but during the whole process you knew and so you didn't get involved, you just had to accept it and hate it...

With Big Mac and Slammin' Sammy, every baseball fan got sucked in...we all loved it, we all remembered why we loved the game and it was a shining moment for baseball...you could apply the same stuff to Luis Gonzalez and the 2001 world series...

Both are now tainted and having the rug pulled out from underneath you, to me, is much more painful...
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Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
452 days ago
Score 3+-
SportsApple, I am in your camp. In my mind, 61 and 755 remain unbeaten. And I agree with JuT as well - if Griffey Jr. gets 715, I'll consider that a legit number. But as I said, I am just a cranky traditionalist.
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TheSportsAppleAll-American
452 days ago
Score 2+-
true good points. I changed the channel last summer when ESPN cut in to show Barroid's live at bats while chasing the record.

I'd lump Palmiero in the same category as McGwire and Bonds. I lived in Baltimore from 2001-2005 and besides Cal, Raffy was the next big star. No one saw him as a guy who would have used anything illegal and then bam, he wags his finger Motumbo style and gets caught.

I admit I was sucked in during the summer of '98. Everything in the past decade and a half of baseball seems like you could make a case one way or the other for a record or a series to have been tainted. As a huge baseball fan, you're right, its painful.
Permalink
RomiezzoLegend
452 days ago
Score 4+-
#44 This user is a fan of Hank Aaron the TRUE Homerun King.
Permalink | Reply
TheSportsAppleAll-American
452 days ago
Score 1+-
agreed Romi
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Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
452 days ago
Score 1+-
You know that I would never argue this point!
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AfraidofedhochuliDraft Pick
452 days ago
Score 3+-
Great article. I love Hank. My Grandfather waited in line for 6 hours when his book came out, so he could get my copy autographed. My most prized possession.
Permalink | Reply
Manny StilesMajor Leaguer
452 days ago
Score 1+-
Not to piss on the parade, but Barry Bonds rreally did hit that many home runs, helped or not.

Hank Aaron took greenies, Babe Ruth did coke, Roger Connor at sheep testicles... who cares? Then there's these other guys like Josh Gibson and Sadaharu Oh...


The game has changed every year, every decade so much that there is NO WAY to compare the past players to each other, let alone today.

Besides, the greatest home run hitter ever to touch the face of earth probably died well before baseball was "invented".


People need to get over the love affair with accumulated numbers. Players who accumulate numbers only do so because of more opportunity, health and LUCK.


Besides, Hank Aaron wasn't even the greatest HR hitter of HIS generation.
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Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
452 days ago
Score 1+-
I will have to respectfully disagree with these sentiments. Baseball is a game of numbers. And I don't know if I would categorize Aaron as an "accumulator" of numbers. And I would say that Aaron was one of the greatest players of his generation.
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Niteowl049AAA-er
452 days ago
Score 1+-
To me Hank Aaron and Roger Maris still hold the career and single season marks for home runs. It disgusts me that McGwire went over and hugged the Maris family when he hit No.62 knowing he had cheated to get the record. When a 37 year old player that had hit only 34 homers two seasons earlier hits 73 it tells me something is rotten in Denmark or in this case San Francisco.
Permalink | Reply
TrizzAll-American
452 days ago
Score -1+-
Sorry but Barry is the homerun king until further notice, you can hide under a rock all you want but at the end of the day its just stats, you don't get a trophy for it, its not why they joined the mlb. You dont like that Barry has the record fine, hold your breath and wait for A-Rod.
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FrugolfVarsity Captain
451 days ago
Score 1+-
No Trizz, I choose to stay under the rock and accept Roger & Hank as the Home-run kings.I had the priviledge of watching both men hit their historic home-runs and will take those memories to the grave with me.I could have watched the cheaters hit theirs too but chose to turn off the T.V.
Permalink | Reply
Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
450 days ago
Score 0+-
Agree 100 percent. I'd rather be under that rock than to diminish my memories of great baseball moments. The sad thing is that Bonds was on his way to the hall prior to joining the Giants. He was an excellent player and didn't need any help.
Permalink
Mikeyfranchise85Soccer Kid
451 days ago
Score 0+-
Regarding previous non-steroid era single season home run record holder Roger Maris.... prior to 1961 there were 154 games per season for American teams with the National League following precedent in 1962. Shouldn't that also recieve an asterisk of sorts as Babe Ruth hit 60 home runs in fewer games?
Permalink | Reply
Sj-hypocycloidAll-American
450 days ago
Score 0+-
Maris did get an asterisk...and it was one of the more painful things that baseball has done. Maris endured endless venom as he chased Ruth and after he hit 61, baseball added the asterisk. Maris suffered hair loss and mental anguish throughout the 1961 season and then was smacked in the face by baseball after this great achievement.
Permalink
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Categories: Hank Aaron fans | Player Fan Tags | Opinions | Opinions by User Sj-hypocycloid | April 8, 2008 | April 2008 | Baseball Opinions | MLB Opinions | Milwaukee Braves Opinions | Atlanta Braves Opinions | Home Run King Opinions | Hank Aaron Opinions

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