Nearly 40 years before the 1984 movie “The Natural” transformed fictional baseball character Roy Hobbs into a pop culture icon, Bama Rowell of the Boston Braves did what Hollywood screenwriters only could imagine.
On May 30, 1946, in the second game of an afternoon doubleheader against the Dodgers, Rowell launched a towering drive to right. The ball struck the Bulova clock high atop the scoreboard at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, shattering the dial’s neon tubing and showering right fielder Dixie Walker with falling glass. As the New York Times put it, “The clock spattered minutes all over the place.”
In the film version of “The Natural,” Roy Hobbs, portrayed by actor Robert Redford, clouted a ball into the outfield lights, sending an explosion of sparks into the night. Hobbs’ walkoff home run clinched the pennant for the fictitious New York Knights. Movie clip
(In Bernard Malamud’s superior 1952 novel “The Natural,” Hobbs strikes out.)
Bama Rowell’s clock-shattering shot was a ground-rule double, not a home run, and it came in the second inning for a team on its way to a fourth-place finish in an eight-team league.
Good hit, no field
Carvel William Rowell was from Citronelle, Alabama. Once the territory of the Chickasaw tribe, the town was named for the citronella grass prevalent in the area. Citronella oil is a popular insect repellent.
A high school and semipro pitcher, Rowell also was a prep football, basketball and track standout. He accepted a football scholarship to Louisiana State University, but before he had a chance to play for the varsity, he signed a pro baseball contract, according to the Mobile (Ala.) Register.
Because he could hit, Rowell was converted into a second baseman in the minors, but fielding was a struggle. Playing in the Dodgers’ system in 1938, he made 64 errors _ 12 in 17 games with Winston-Salem and 52 in 114 games with Dayton.
After the season, baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis declared Rowell a free agent on a technicality. (His transfer from Winston-Salem to Dayton hadn’t been filed properly.)
Despite his fielding woes, the Boston Braves were impressed by the .310 batting mark, 30 doubles and 23 stolen bases Rowell produced for Dayton. Jocko Munch, a Braves representative, handed him a wad of 20 $50 bills. Rowell pocketed the $1,000 and signed with Boston.
Sent to minor-league Hartford in 1939, Rowell became an outfielder. He still couldn’t cope with balls that bounced his way. In desperation, he tried dropping to a knee. “You’re using the wrong knee,” outfielder Johnny Cooney told him. According to the Boston Globe, Rowell replied, “I knowed something was wrong.”
His Hartford teammates hung the Bama nickname on him. “They used to kid me about being from Alabama and the name happened to stick,” Rowell told the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Casey takes a chance
Called up to Boston in September 1939, Rowell made 14 outfield starts. Early in the 1940 season, Boston manager Casey Stengel moved Sibby Sisti from second to third and put Rowell at second base.
(In a serendipitous twist, Sisti went on to have a role as the Pittsburgh manager in the film, “The Natural.”)
Stengel was well aware of Rowell’s shortcomings as a fielder (“The ball runs up his arm and you expect it to jump in a pocket like a little white rat,” Stengel told Harold Kaese of the Globe), but the manager took a liking to the rookie.
“The kid’s got a natural double play arm,” Stengel said to the Dayton Journal Herald. “He can whip that ball right across his chin while pivoting … He’s fast and he hustles … I’d like to see him make it. He’s a good kid.”
Rowell committed 30 errors during the 1940 season, but hit .305. In a June game against the Cardinals, he had three hits and three errors. In another game versus St. Louis in September, he drove in six runs. Boxscore and Boxscore
“He’s one of the best hitters in the National League,” Cardinals pitcher Lon Warneke told the Globe in August 1940. “He hasn’t got the power some other hitters have, but there isn’t anybody in our league that’s any tougher to get out.”
Rowell followed up with 60 RBI for Boston in 1941 (the team leader had 68) but made 40 errors at second base.
On Dec. 4, 1941, three days before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Rowell was inducted into the U.S. Army. He served in artillery duty during World War II and missed four baseball seasons before he was discharged from the military in October 1945.
Stop a clock
When Rowell returned to the Braves at 1946 spring training, Casey Stengel was gone and Billy Southworth was the manager. Southworth joined Boston after leading the Cardinals to three consecutive National League pennants and two World Series titles.
Southworth shifted Rowell, 30, from second base to the outfield. A left-handed batter, Rowell played primarily against right-handed pitchers. Southworth tried him in the fourth, second and fifth spots in the batting order. Then, for the May 30 doubleheader at Brooklyn, Rowell was put in the leadoff position.
In the opener, Rowell went hitless against Kirby Higbe. Boxscore
A rookie, Hank Behrman, started Game 2 for Brooklyn. Rowell led off by grounding out. In the second, with the score tied at 2-2, Boston had runners on first and third, one out, when Rowell came to the plate again.
Ebbets Field was packed with 35,484 spectators, the Dodgers’ largest home crowd of 1946. (Years later, the New York Times, noting Bernard Malamud was a Brooklynite “who haunted Ebbets Field as a youth,” pondered whether he was at the game and whether his experiences there reflected any scenes he wrote in “The Natural.”)
Behrman gave Rowell a pitch to his liking and he lofted it toward the scoreboard. It was common for batters to smack balls off the scoreboard in the Ebbets Field bandbox, but none had soared into the Bulova clock since it was installed atop the scoreboard in 1941.
Rowell’s drive smacked into the clock at 4:25 p.m. Because the scoreboard was in play, Rowell’s blast was a ground-rule double. It drove in the go-ahead run and knocked Behrman from the game.
“The clock continued to run for an hour, but stopped when the hand reached the spot that Bama’s ball had hit,” The Sporting News reported.
Bulova had promised a watch to any batter who hit the clock. Forty-one years later, in 1987, while doing research for a magazine article about home runs, sports reporter Bert Sugar read about Rowell’s smash off the Ebbets Field clock. When he tracked down Rowell, 71, in Citronelle, Alabama, the ex-ballplayer told him, “I never did get no watch.”
Sugar contacted Bulova officials and told them about the oversight. After persistent pestering from Sugar, a Bulova representative presented Rowell a watch in a ceremony in Rowell’s hometown on July 28, 1987. Boxscore
Clock runs out
A back ailment hampered Rowell in 1946. “It got so bad at one time that he couldn’t bend over to pick up a groundball,” the Globe reported.
The next year, platooning again in the outfield, he made 12 errors in left. At spring training in 1948, Rowell went to the Dodgers in the trade that brought Eddie Stanky to Boston. Stanky helped the Braves become National League champions in 1948. Rowell spent a few days with the Dodgers, who decided to send him to minor-league Montreal. When Rowell objected to the demotion, the Dodgers moved him to the Phillies.
The 1948 season was Rowell’s last in the majors. During his time in the National League, he hit .381 against Carl Hubbell, clouted home runs versus Johnny Vander Meer and Lon Warneke, smacked five hits in a game against the Phillies and three doubles in a game versus the Cubs, but, for pure drama, nothing topped his clock-smashing shot in Brooklyn.

Beautiful addition to the The Natural movie and that closing scene which seldom happens, the walk off pennant winning, light exploding blast though Derek Jeter sure played well in the post season. How intriguing to ponder whether Malamud might have been at the game and shaped his writing on the subject.
Anyway, always a treat to read about players I’ve never heard of and that he was a Boston Brave means even more, to me anyway. That is such an overlooked team in Boston and yet, the Jimmy Fund started with the Braves, not the Red Sox.
That getting paid with a wad of 20’s is so damn refreshing. Maybe I’m just old but I prefer cash over any digital transfer of funds. It’s boring and robs collectors of coins and cash and also makes it impossible for people down on their luck to panhandle.
I also wanted to add that peppering your posts with fascinating details like the name origin of the city where he was from and the extensive research you do really turn your posts into important historical documents.
I am thankful that you appreciate the details I put into these posts, Steve. I enjoy digging them out during the research. I do think it helps enrich the storytelling.
It’s tough to do, really tough. I tried to write historical pieces like you do and it’s darn tootin difficult, much easier to dabble in fiction.
Another baseball player who had four years of his career taken away because of military service. Even though he saw limited playing time in 1946 it’s still pretty impressive that he was able to put up a .280 batting average. In looking over his batting logs for the 1940 regular season I noticed that from late July to early September he hit safely in 40 of 44 games with 21 multiple hit games. From what I understand his son Carvell Jr. was also an excellent athlete who also went on to become a very successful and influential coach.
Thanks for the statistical info on Bama Rowell’s 1940 season, Phillip. He was quite a successful hitter that year. In August 1940, when Rowell was leading the National League in hitting for a while, the Associated Press noted, “Bama looked so terrible early this year that just about everyone gave up on him _ everyone but manager Casey Stengel.” Rowell took a .329 batting average into September 1940, but then hit just .229 for the month and finished at .305. Stan Hack of the Cubs won the NL batting title at .317.
Taking nothing away from his accomplishment, it’s worth noting that Rowell’s .280 batting mark in 1946 came primarily against right-handers. Platooned by manager Billy Southworth, Rowell hit .299 versus right-handers and .103 against left-handers in 1946.
Throughout his time in the National League, Rowell did well against the Cardinals. His career batting mark versus St. Louis was .285, and he was a career .297 hitter at Sportsman’s Park.
Despite his clock-shattering hit, Rowell usually struggled at Ebbets Field. His career batting average in Brooklyn was .212.
Yeah, man — stories like this remind you why baseball still matters. Just some regular guy from Alabama who couldn’t field a lick, but for one swing he stopped time in Brooklyn. Can’t help but smile at that.
Yep, you said it well, Gary. Along a similar line, as I was researching this, it brought a smile to learn that two guys named Bama and Dixie were the principal characters in a drama played out in Brooklyn.