In 1968, seven years after he broke Babe Ruth’s single-season home run record, Roger Maris hit the last homer of his career. He did it as a Cardinal on the afternoon St. Louis clinched its second consecutive National League pennant.
By then, Maris no longer was the slugger who had hit 61 home runs for the 1961 Yankees. Injury-plagued, he was tired of baseball and instead was looking forward to running an Anheuser-Busch distributorship in Florida.
Maris, 34, also was hampered by a right hand weakened by playing most of the 1965 season with a broken hamate bone. Without hand strength, Maris lacked a consistent power stroke, especially on fastballs. His home run production steadily decreased, dropping from 13 in 1966 to nine in 1967.
When Maris homered off a Don Wilson off-speed pitch on Sept. 15, 1968, at the Astrodome, it brought his season total to five. It was Maris’ first home run since July and the last of 275 over 12 big-league seasons. Boxscore
All five of the right fielder’s 1968 home runs were hit on the road. Three came against the Niekro brothers, Joe of the Cubs and Phil of the Braves.
Last hurrah
After Maris hit a two-run, third-inning homer off Phil Niekro on June 10, 1968, he removed himself from the game because of a bruised heel. After the all-star break, Maris improved and hit .359 (14-for-39) in July. On Aug. 5, Maris announced he would retire after the season.
A month later, when the Cardinals played the Mets for the last time that season in New York, where Maris had spent seven tumultuous years with the Yankees, the Shea Stadium scoreboard flashed this message in the third inning:
“To Roger Maris, making his last New York appearance as an active player today, we express our appreciation of an outstanding career and wish you and yours the best.”
Maris, who sat out that game, took quiet delight in hitting a double and two singles the previous night against the Mets in his New York finale. Boxscore
In the first two games of the Cardinals-Astros series at Houston Sept. 13-15, Maris went hitless in nine at-bats. After he popped out to the catcher in the Sept. 14 game, Maris “banged his bat hard against the roof of the dugout,” The Sporting News reported.
In his first at-bat against Wilson on Sept. 15, Maris struck out, extending his hitless skid to 10 in the series.
When he came up against Wilson in the third, with Curt Flood on first and one out, Maris launched a two-run home run, lifting the Cardinals to a 3-2 lead and sparking them to a 7-4 pennant-clinching victory. His last home run also was the only one he hit at the Astrodome.
Comfortable as Cardinal
On Sept. 29, the Cardinals honored Maris in ceremonies before the final game of the regular season at St. Louis’ Busch Stadium II.
After receiving a standing ovation from the crowd of 23,792, Maris said, “I want to thank the Cardinals for two of my most enjoyable years in baseball and I want to thank all the fans for accepting me the way they did.”
Maris, acquired by the Cardinals in a December 1966 trade with the Yankees, hit 14 home runs in his two seasons with St. Louis. Here is a look at those:
1967
1. May 9, solo HR vs. Woodie Fryman, at Pittsburgh.
2. May 21, solo HR vs. Don Cardwell, at New York.
3. June 10, 3-run HR vs. Dodgers’ Bob Miller, at St. Louis.
4. June 11, solo HR vs. Dodgers’ Ron Perranoski, at St. Louis.
5. June 23, solo HR vs. Phillies’ Rick Wise, at St. Louis.
6. July 16, solo HR vs. Mets’ Dick Selma, at St. Louis.
7. July 18, solo HR vs. Jim Maloney, at Cincinnati.
8. July 29, solo HR vs. Cecil Upshaw, at Atlanta.
9. Sept. 7, 2-run HR vs. Cal Koonce, at New York.
NOTE: Maris hit a solo homer off Jim Lonborg of the Red Sox in Game 5 of the 1967 World Series.
1968
1. April 14, 3-run HR vs. Joe Niekro, at Chicago.
2. April 14, solo HR vs. Joe Niekro, at Chicago.
3. June 10, 2-run HR vs. Phil Niekro, at Atlanta.
4. July 26, 2-run HR vs. Steve Blass, at Pittsburgh.
5. Sept. 15, 2-run HR vs. Don Wilson, at Houston.
Previously: Slider was key to 15 wins in a row for Bob Gibson in 1968
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