Batting for the Reds against the Cardinals, Wally Post boldly launched a baseball where none had gone before at the original Busch Stadium in St. Louis.
On April 14, 1961, Post hit a home run that struck an Anheuser-Busch sign high atop the scoreboard in left.
If not for the obstruction, the ball would have carried nearly 600 feet, according to estimates.
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch called it the “most impressive, most powerful home run hit in Busch Stadium.”
Big bopper
A right-handed batter, Wally Post reached the majors with the Reds in September 1949 when he was 20.
At 6 feet 1 and 190 pounds, he wasn’t exceptionally large but he was exceptionally powerful. Post hit 40 home runs for the Reds in 1955 and 36 in 1956. In 21 games against the 1956 Cardinals, managed by Fred Hutchinson, Post produced nine home runs and 17 RBI.
In 1959, Post beat Hank Aaron in TV’s Home Run Derby. Video
“He was a fun guy who could hit the ball a ton and was a good fielder with a strong, accurate arm,” catcher Andy Seminick recalled in the book “We Played the Game.”
For 20 years, the folks at Siebler Clothing Store in Cincinnati offered a free suit to any player whose home run hit their advertising sign behind the left field wall at Crosley Field. The store gave away 176 suits. Post won the most, with 11.
The Reds traded Post to the Phillies for pitcher Harvey Haddix in December 1957 but reacquired him in June 1960 when Hutchinson was the Reds’ manager.
Having gotten thick around the middle, Post dropped weight and showed up at spring training in 1961 focused on beating out Gus Bell for a starting outfield spot. Getting trim enabled Post to swing the bat more freely and the results were impressive. He hit seven home runs in spring training games.
“It just shows what a fellow can do when he gets himself in shape and comes down here determined to win a job,” Hutchinson told The Sporting News. “Post’s power has been tremendous.”
We have liftoff
In the Reds’ season opener at home against the Cubs, Post started in right field and hit a three-run home run.
Three days later, the Reds were in St. Louis to play in the Cardinals’ Friday night home opener at Busch Stadium. Batting in the cleanup spot, Post had a triple and a walk in his first two plate appearances against starter Curt Simmons.
In the sixth, the Cardinals led, 3-0, when Post came up with one on and two outs. The first pitch from Simmons was to Post’s liking. As soon as he swung, the players knew it was something special.
Left fielder Stan Musial turned his head and watched the ball soar. “It was like a man in orbit,” Musial said to the Cincinnati Enquirer.
Simmons told The Sporting News, “Usually I don’t watch homers, but this one I had to see.”
Applied science
The ball cleared the wall and rocketed over the bleachers. Behind the bleachers was the massive scoreboard. Attached to the top of the scoreboard was a rectangular Budweiser sign. Atop the Budweiser sign was a square sign showing a neon Anheuser-Busch eagle. The animated eagle flapped its wings when a Cardinal hit a home run.
Post’s projectile pounded high off the Anheuser-Busch sign near the eagle’s beak. “The ball almost made the eagle scream,” the Post-Dispatch noted.
In his book “Pennant Race,” Reds reliever Jim Brosnan wrote, “That’s about as high and hard as a ball can be batted by a human being.”
The Anheuser-Busch sign was about 90 feet from the ground. “That ball still had juice left in it when it hit the sign,” Hutchinson said.
Reds pitcher Jay Hook, pursuing a master’s degree in mechanical engineering at Northwestern University, estimated the ball would have carried 569 feet if its path hadn’t been impeded.
“The ball carried about 150 feet a second,” Hook told the Post-Dispatch.
Cardinals outfielder Charlie James, who had an electrical engineering degree from the University of Missouri, agreed the ball would have gone nearly 600 feet.
Nothing like it
Musial, who two innings earlier hit a pitch from Hook over the pavilion roof in right and onto Grand Boulevard, told the Post-Dispatch, “Post’s shot made mine look like a bunt.”
In comments to The Sporting News, Musial said Post’s home run was “the most powerful I’ve ever seen.”
“I’ve seen some balls go halfway up on that scoreboard but never up there,” Musial told the Dayton Daily News.
Hutchinson said, “That’s the longest homer I ever saw.”
Cardinals manager Solly Hemus and broadcaster Harry Caray echoed Hutchinson’s comment.
Cardinals general manager Bing Devine said, “Post’s ball has got to be the longest here” at Busch Stadium, formerly known as Sportsman’s Park.
Bill DeWitt Sr., who worked in the front offices of the Cardinals and Browns before becoming Reds general manager, said there was no doubt Post’s home run was a record for the ballpark.
“Paul Easterling of the Tigers hit one out of here at the top of the pavilion roof in center,” DeWitt told the Post-Dispatch. “Babe Ruth hit some long ones here, but they were into the center field seats.”
Scoreboard engineer Lou Adamie recalled Luke Easter of the Indians hitting a ball over the pavilion extremity in center, but agreed Post’s was the mightiest.
Cardinals outfielder Bob Nieman said Post’s home run would have gone at least as far as Mickey Mantle’s epic shot against Chuck Stobbs of the Senators at Washington’s Griffith Stadium in 1953. Mantle’s homer cleared the left field bleachers and was estimated to go more than 500 feet.
Cardinals crusher
Post, 31, told the Dayton Daily News that “everything was perfect” with his swing on the tape-measure home run.
“I only wish a sequence camera had recorded the swing so I could study what I did right,” Post said to the Cincinnati Enquirer. Boxscore
Post hit 20 home runs in 99 games for the 1961 Reds, who won the National League pennant. In 13 games versus the 1961 Cardinals, Post hit five home runs and batted .342. Ten of his 13 hits against the Cardinals were for extra bases.
In the World Series against the Yankees, Post hit a home run and batted .333.
Four years later, Jim Wynn of the Astros hit a home run that struck the Budweiser sign on the Busch Stadium scoreboard, a mammoth shot, but still short of where Post’s ball landed.
Nice to see that photo of Busch/Sportsman’s. The new “retro” park tries to bring back some of that look and atmosphere, but there’s just too much of a Six Flags Over Downtown feel to it. Everything is programmed.
I fully agree with you. Well-stated.
With Cincinnati he averaged 1 homerun every 17.6 at bats.That still ranks 5th all time. On April 29, 1956, in a double-header against the Cubs, Wally Post had a monster of a day. 5 for 8 with 4 homeruns and 8 rbi’s. From what I understand Wally and his brother were both pitchers on the same minor league team.
Thanks for reading and for commenting.
Post hit the longest home runs in the National League in the 50s and 60s. And only Mantle challenged him for the most powerful hitter in baseball.
Thanks for the insights.