Move over, Babe
Hitting home run No. 715
Four days after tying Babe Ruth with his 714th home run in the season opener in Cincinnati, Hank Aaron 51 years ago tonight puts himself alone at the top of the list for baseball’s all-time home run hitters.
In a nationally televised game from Atlanta, the Braves’ All-Star outfielder breaks Ruth’s record in the fourth inning with a two-run homer off Los Angeles Dodgers left-hander Al Downing.
Darrell Evans starts the bottom of the fourth inning by reaching base on a fielding error by Dodgers shortstop Bill Russell.
Celebrating home run No. 715
Then, with a crowd of 53,775 watching the Monday night game inside Fulton County Stadium, Aaron lifts Downing’s 1-0 pitch to him over the wall in left-center field and into the glove of Braves relief pitcher Tom House, who is waiting on the other side of the fence near the Atlanta bullpen.
Aaron bats twice more in the game – grounding out both times – before leaving after the seventh inning with Atlanta ahead 7-4, which will remain the final score.
Aaron ends up hitting 20 homers in 1974 for the Braves.
Atlanta after the season trades Aaron to Milwaukee, where Aaron’s Hall of Fame career begins in 1954.
Aaron plays two more seasons with the Milwaukee Brewers, totaling 22 more homers to reach 755 for his career before retiring. Three of those 755 homers come off Downing.
Aaron, who endures countless acts of racism as he approaches Ruth’s record, handles his passing of Ruth with the class and dignity that defines both his career and life.
“I don’t want them to forget Ruth,” Aaron says at the time. ““I just want them to remember me.”