Dick Nen reached the pinnacle of his career in his first big-league game. He played in 366 more after that, but nothing topped what he did against the Cardinals in his debut.
On Sept. 18, 1963, in his second at-bat in the majors, Nen slammed a home run for the Dodgers, tying the score in the ninth inning and stunning the Cardinals. The Dodgers went on to win, completing a series sweep that put them on the verge of clinching a pennant.
Three decades later, reflecting on his storybook feat in St. Louis, Nen told the Palm Beach Post, “I should have walked away right then. That was my one day.”
Prized prospect
The California town of South Gate, seven miles south of downtown Los Angeles and dubbed the “Azalea City,” is the birthplace of Dick Nen as well as other sports figures such as NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle, Baseball Hall of Fame umpire Doug Harvey and Red Sox second baseman Doug Griffin.
After attending Los Angeles Harbor College, Nen went to Long Beach State and played baseball there. A left-handed batter, he hit with power and fielded gracefully at first base. Kenny Myers, the scout who brought Willie Davis to the Dodgers, signed Nen for them. Two weeks later, the Cubs offered $100,000 for Nen, but the Dodgers declined, the Los Angeles Times reported.
In 1961, Nen’s first pro season, with Reno, he produced 32 home runs, 144 RBI and batted .351. In a home game against Fresno, he blasted a ball out of the park and onto the roof of an indoor municipal swimming pool 100 feet beyond the outfield fence. With 177 hits and 102 walks, he had a .458 on-base percentage.
Promoted from Class C Reno to Class AAA Spokane in 1962, Nen was limited to 72 games. He joined the team after the season started because of a military commitment and then was sidelined when a thrown ball struck him below the right eye. Back with Spokane in 1963, Nen had 84 RBI and a .369 on-base percentage (167 hits and 75 walks).
Welcome aboard
On Tuesday night, Sept. 17, 1963, Spokane lost in the finale of the Pacific Coast League championship series at Oklahoma City. Nen was called up to the Dodgers after the game. On Wednesday, Sept. 18, he boarded a flight in Oklahoma City, arrived in St. Louis in the afternoon and went directly to the ballpark, where the Dodgers were to play the Cardinals that night in the finale of a three-game series. Issued uniform No. 5, Nen took batting practice, then settled in to watch the game from the dugout.
After losing the first two games and falling three behind the front-running Dodgers, the Cardinals desperately needed a win in Game 3. With Bob Gibson pitching for them, the Cardinals appeared on their way to achieving their goal, leading 5-1 through seven innings.
A pitcher, reliever Bob Miller, was due to be the first batter for the Dodgers in the eighth. Dodgers manager Walter Alston, seeking a left-handed pinch-hitter to send against Gibson, had two options: Derrell Griffith, called up from Class AA, or Nen, called up from Class AAA. Neither had been in a big-league game.
Alston chose Nen. “I was scared stiff,” Nen recalled to the Los Angeles Times. “I had no idea I’d be called upon.”
In making his big-league debut, Nen joined Truck Hannah (1918 Yankees), Johnny Reder (1932 Red Sox) and Eddie Kazak (1948 Cardinals) as players whose last names spell the same forward and backward. Since then, the list includes Toby Harrah (1969 Senators), Mark Salas (1984 Cardinals), Dave Otto (1987 Athletics), Robb Nen (1993 Rangers), Juan Salas (2006 Rays), Marino Salas (2008 Pirates), Fernando Salas (2010 Cardinals) and Glenn Otto (2021 Rangers).
Nen lined out sharply to center fielder Curt Flood, but the Dodgers went on to score three times in the inning, cutting the St. Louis lead to 5-4. Nen stayed in the game, taking over at first for Ron Fairly, who had been lifted for pinch-hitter Frank Howard during the eighth-inning rally.
In the ninth, with one out, none on, Nen batted for the second time. Right-hander Ron Taylor threw him a fastball, low and away. “I put the ball where I wanted it,” Taylor told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Nen drove it onto the pavilion roof in right-center for a home run, tying the score. “I knew I hit it good,” Nen told the Los Angeles Times, “but I had no idea it was a home run until I saw the umpire give the home run sign.”
Watching on TV in California, Nen’s father and sister whooped with joy. Nen’s mother, attending a church function, got a call from her daughter, who exclaimed, “Richard hit a home run to tie the (score).”
The game moved into extra innings and became a duel between relievers Ron Perranoski (Dodgers) and Lew Burdette (Cardinals). With two on in the 11th, Nen nearly got a game-winning single, but second baseman Julian Javier ranged far to his left, made what the Post-Dispatch described as “an improbable glove-hand stop” of the grounder, wheeled and threw out Nen at first. In the 13th, with Dodgers runners on second and third, one out, Burdette issued an intentional walk to Nen. “A pretty high compliment for a rookie in his first big-league game,” columnist Jim Murray noted.
Maury Wills followed with a grounder, sending home the runner from third with the winning run. Boxscore
On the Dodgers’ flight home, most of the talk concerned Nen’s heroics. “I never saw anybody break in more spectacularly,” pitcher Johnny Podres told the Long Beach Independent. “That was the biggest homer of the year. It gave us the shot in the arm we needed.”
The Dodgers’ plane landed at 4:08 a.m. When Nen got home, his parents greeted him with a big spaghetti breakfast, featuring their homemade sauce.
A few days later, Sept. 24, the Dodgers clinched the pennant. Then they swept the Yankees in the World Series. Nen joined the club too late to be eligible, but he pitched batting practice before Game 4 and was given a $1,000 winner’s share.
Wanted in Washington
Nen’s home run against the Cardinals turned out to be his only hit as a Dodger.
Entering 1964 spring training as a candidate to earn a spot on the Dodgers’ Opening Day roster, Nen “developed the bad habit of lowering his back shoulder when he swings,” the Associated Press reported.
He was sent back to Spokane and spent the season there. In December 1964, the Dodgers dealt Nen, Frank Howard, Ken McMullen, Pete Richert and Phil Ortega to the Senators for Claude Osteen, John Kennedy and $100,000.
The Senators were managed by ex-Dodgers first baseman Gil Hodges. At spring training in 1961, Hodges had given pointers to Nen on how to play first base.
Nen, 25, began the 1965 season in the minors, but when Senators first baseman Bob Chance failed to hit as hoped, Nen was brought up in July to replace him. Nen started 63 games at first base for the 1965 Senators and hit .317 with runners in scoring position. He slugged two homers against Catfish Hunter, a walkoff homer to beat Luis Tiant and a grand slam versus Fred Talbot. Boxscore Boxscore Boxscore Boxscore
“This boy has all the qualifications to be a dandy player,” Senators general manager George Selkirk told the Washington Daily News. “… He’s our first baseman and I don’t see anyone taking it away from him.”
The good vibes didn’t last long. Nen had a terrible spring training in 1966. When the season opened, ex-Cardinal Joe Cunningham was the Senators’ first baseman and Nen was on the bench. In June, the Senators got Ken Harrelson from the Athletics and he took over at first base. Nen batted .213.
Nen “has the idea in his head that he is going to be lousy in the spring and so naturally he is,” Senators coach Joe Pignatano told Jerry Izenberg of the Newark Star-Ledger. “You can’t come in here thinking that way and expect to be anything but bad. When you do that, you concede the job. He could win it in a minute if he’d hit the way we think he can.”
Years later, Nen said to the Miami Herald, “I struggled most of my career, especially with the mental part. I always had to find ways to overcome the bad times and look forward to the good times. It seems like I went through more bad times than good. I should have done a lot better.”
In 1967, Nen was the Senators’ Opening Day first baseman, but in May they got Mike Epstein from the Orioles and he became the starter. Nen batted .218.
Seeking a pinch-hitter, the Cubs acquired Nen a week before the start of the 1968 season. On May 15, his two-run single in the ninth inning against Jack Billingham beat the Dodgers. It was Nen’s first National League hit since his 1963 home run versus the Cardinals. Boxscore
After batting .181 for the 1968 Cubs, Nen was returned to the Senators. He played his last game in the majors for them in June 1970.
All in the family
Nen’s son, Robb Nen, became a prominent big-league reliever. In 10 seasons with the Rangers (1993), Marlins (1993-97) and Giants (1998-2002), Robb had 314 saves, 45 wins and a 2.98 ERA. He pitched in two World Series (1997 Marlins and 2002 Giants) and was the National League saves leader (45) in 2001.
“Nen has the kind of arm that comes along once every 10 years,” Marlins general manager Dave Dombrowski told the Miami Herald in 1997.
Dick Nen said to the San Francisco Examiner, “We don’t know where the good arm came from. It didn’t come from me. He must have gotten it from my wife.”

I always appreciate these stories about ball players who are not marquee names. Nen’s story shows how hard it is to be a major leaguer and how tenuous that career is. And when’s the last time you heard a GM describe a player as “dandy.”
Thanks for a dandy comment, Ken.
A son of a harbor truck driver, Dick Nen apparently was a good dad to his son, Robb Nen. “He’s always been around and supported me on whatever I’ve done,” Robb Nen told the San Francisco Chronicle. “I’ve always looked up to him, and he’s been a big part of my life.”
Mark, I didn’t know Robb was Dick’s son until now. I recall Robb’s career well but while I had Dick’s baseball card at one time (!), it was very early in my “career” following baseball so I didn’t know much about Robb’s dad. It was fun reading the quote that Dick credited his wife for Robb’s live arm.
Those 1960s Dick Nen baseball cards as a Washington Senator seemed to show up in every other pack when I was a kid.
Robb Nen and J.T. Snow were teammates at Los Alamitos High School in California. Then Nen and Snow were teammates with the San Francisco Giants.
The 2002 National League champion Giants had at least 4 sons of major-league pro athletes: Robb Nen (son of Dick Nen), J.T. Snow (son of former Rams NFL receiver Jack Snow), Barry Bonds (son of Bobby Bonds) and David Bell (son of Buddy Bell and grandson of Gus Bell.) The 2002 Giants also had pitcher Tim Worrell, brother of former Cardinals closer Todd Worrell.
Really interesting info about those 2002 Giants and the father-son combos. “Team Bloodlines” to be sure. Hadn’t thought about Jack Snow in ages!
I’m really touched by the fact that he opened up about his struggles with maintaining a positive attitude. It’s something I can relate to. When I was younger I can remember struggling with being pessimistic about myself and my capabilities. It’s too bad that he never found his groove because he certainly had the talent. He certainly was a good clutch hitter. With the bases loaded he batted .375 for his career. And 10 of his 21 career homeruns came with runners on base. One things for sure, had he only batted against Catfish Hunter and Luis Tiant he would have ended up in the HOF. Against both those guys Dick Nen batted .364 with 6 homeruns and a slugging percentage over .800. He most certainly was one proud father watching his son Robb pitch.
You make a positive difference with your informative comments on these posts, Phillip, and it is much appreciated.
It is fascinating that Dick Nen, though his big-league career totals are modest, had such success against the likes of Catfish Hunter and Luis Tiant.
Hunter was a 19-year-old rookie in 1965 when Nen hit the two home runs against him. Only one other batter, Don Mincher of the Twins, hit two homers versus Catfish in 1965.
Tiant pitched in 573 games during 19 seasons in the majors and gave up only two walkoff home runs _ the one to Nen in 1965 and the other to George Brett in 1976.
As a student of Cardinals history, I thought you’d appreciate this fact: the player Marlins GM Dave Dombrowski traded to the Rangers for Robb Nen was former St. Louis pitcher Cris Carpenter.
That part you discovered about the last names being the same forward and backwards…..kind of mind blowing that you find out these excellent addition to posts. One question, how did they contact the mother at a church function? Walkie talkies?
I can hear Harry Caray: “Nen spelled backwards … is still Nen. Holy cow!”
According to the Associated Press, Dick Nen’s sister Donna said she called their mother via telephone at the church _ the Christian Science 33rd Church _ to inform her of the home run. Sounds to me like a good old-fashioned dial phone connection.
Harry Caray Hilarious! Great one Mark.