The Adobe Flash Player is required to view this multimedia interactive. Get it here.
Home  >  Sports The greatest game ever pitched 50th anniversary

Harvey Haddix reached legendary status 50 years ago

Clark County native’s feat remains unmatched in baseball history.

Hot Topics

News-Sun archives/Harvey Haddix pitched for the Cincinnati Redlegs in 1959 and was a pitching coach in Cincinnati in 1969. He was part of two World Series champions, the 1960 Pirates as a pitcher and the 1979 Pirates as a pitching coach.
News-Sun archives News-Sun archives/Harvey Haddix pitched for the Cincinnati Redlegs in 1959 and was a pitching coach in Cincinnati in 1969. He was part of two World Series champions, the 1960 Pirates as a pitcher and the 1979 Pirates as a pitching coach.

Related

By David Jablonski, Staff Writer Updated 8:14 AM Tuesday, May 26, 2009

“A slender southpaw joined baseball’s immortals today — wondering what a guy has to do to win.”

Dave O’Hara, Associated Press, May 27, 1959.

SPRINGFIELD — Fred Haddix couldn’t walk. He couldn’t talk. He couldn’t remember anything, even his own children.

When he awoke from the coma, the 30-year-old weighed about as much as your average 12-year-old, a mere 96 pounds.

For two months, he had lay in a hospital bed, his arms and legs taped down, his body strapped down and his eyes taped shut.

Haddix was near death in the spring of 1959. Encephalitis killed 16 people in Ohio that summer — but not Fred.

“The whole time, I thought I was buried alive,” he said this March, 50 years later.

The virus had robbed him of his memory, and it took many months to fully return. But from the moment he awoke, Fred had the ability to make new memories, and the first thing he was told him when he awoke was the story of his older brother, Harvey, and the greatest game ever pitched.

“May 26, 1959. In Milwaukee. On the mound.

Harvey Haddix, of the Pirates, was mowing them down.

Twenty-seven up. Twenty-seven gone.

Nine innings in the book and not a man had gotten on.”

— Lyrics to Steve Wynn’s 2008 song, “Harvey Haddix,” on The Baseball Project CD.

Bob Friend, the starter, and Elroy Face, baseball’s original closer, complemented each other well 50 years ago. They’re still a winning team today.

Sitting next to each other in the Nelson Briles Room at PNC Park in Pittsburgh on April 7, they reminisced about their old friend and teammate, Harvey Haddix.

Measuring 5-foot-9, 170 pounds, Haddix didn’t have the size of some pitchers. But he had plenty of other winning attributes.

“Confidence,” said Face, listing one thing that made Haddix so successful.

“This guy here was 5-8,” said Friend, pointing to Face. “What am I pushing it? 5-7?”

“5-7, 155 pounds,” Face said.

“These guys had big arms and big hearts,” Friend said. “That’s what Harvey had.”

“He had good stuff, too,” Face said. “Pinpoint control.”

“He knew how to pitch,” Friend said.

On the night of May 26, 1959, Friend and Face witnessed what many consider the greatest game ever pitched. That night against the Braves at County Stadium in Milwaukee, Haddix retired the first 36 batters he faced. Then in the 13th inning, a throwing error, a sacrifice, an intentional walk and finally a complicated home run-turned-double, hit by Joe Adcock, made Haddix and the Pirates 1-0 losers.

No pitcher before that night had ever taken a perfect game beyond nine innings, and no one has since. Harvey’s widow Marcia Haddix, a 1953 Springfield High School graduate who still lives in town, doesn’t believe Harvey ever realized how great he was that night. But even the next day’s headlines recognized the significance of the feat.

“Haddix gains most magnificent mound performance in history of the game, but loses one-hitter to Braves,” one newspaper’s headline read.

In all of baseball history, 223 pitchers have hurled no-hitters. Nine have lost a perfect game on the 27th batter. Only 17 have thrown perfect games.

That number doesn’t include Haddix, whose feat resides in some record books under the category, “Unique Events.”

To Haddix that night, though, it was just another loss. Every defeat left him feeling letdown, he said. He never took pleasure in a well-pitched defeat.

“All I know is we lost 1-0 in 13 innings,” Haddix told reporters. “What’s so historic about that? Didn’t anyone else ever lose a 13-inning shutout?”

“Records were made to be broken. Well, maybe not all of them.”

— Tim Bucey, Springfield News-Sun, May 26, 1984.

Marcia Haddix saved everything. She was the collector, not Harvey. She scaled down the collection years ago when she moved into a smaller house, but even now the display in her home rivals anything in Cooperstown.

Marcia has a baseball from every game Harvey ever won with the box score written neatly in her handwriting between the seams. Not included with that display is a ball from the game he didn’t win.

The night of the game, Marcia was at home in Springfield at her mother’s house. She wasn’t listening to the game because she didn’t think she’d be able to get it on the radio. But over in South Vienna, Harvey’s mom, Nellie, had “one of those big, old radios that sits on the floor, an ancient thing,” Marcia said.

Nellie picked up parts of the game. When the ninth inning ended, she called Marcia.

“Do you know your husband has just pitched a perfect game?” Nellie asked her.

On a rainy night at County Stadium, before a crowd of 19,194, against a Milwaukee team hitting .290, Haddix thrived. It didn’t matter that he had a bad cold and needed to suck on cold tablets all night or that his mound opponent, Lew Burdette, was matching him, at least in keeping the game scoreless. Haddix was on top of his game and exhibited pinpoint control, his catcher Smoky Burgess told the News-Sun in 1984.

Harvey was my just my uncle's brother as I a growing boy loving baseball. Remembering... I see Uncle Ben taking us boys outside with our gloves and bats... training with an expert. Uncle Ben said, "Hold the ball with your... Did you listen to Harvey's game yesterday? What a game!"

David... great article. I enjoyed meeting you at the "celebration" and look forward to our next meeting and reading your articles. Keep up the excellence. Tks.
Dan Fortney
10:22 AM, 8/25/2009
GREAT ARTICLE ! I WAS FORTUNATE TO KNOW HARVEY AND PLAYED ON HIS US ARMYTEAM.AS PITCHING COACH WITH THE RED SOX HE TOOK THE TIME TO SHOW MY10 YR OLD SON THE CLUBHOUSE
& TOLD HIM "DON'T EVER THINK YU'RE TOO SMALL-& DON'T EVER QUIT"- ADVICE WAS WELL USED. I'LL SEND A LETTER HOPE YOU'LL PASS IT TO THE FAMILY
ROBERT (BOBBY)ROCHON
8:49 PM, 5/29/2009
This is a great story, David. These retrospectives often read like relics -- they're only about a single event, a snapshot in time. Yours goes deeper, and it's a story worthwhile to fans of sports and the human spirit, not just the 1959 Pittsburgh Pirates. A tip of the cap to you and your paper!
Darin Painter
9:50 AM, 5/26/2009
We welcome your comments. Please remember this is a public forum and behave appropriately. Your comments must conform to our visitor's agreement.

The form has errors highlighted in red, please review these entries and try again!



Comments are limited to 500 characters


500 character limit

Incorrect please try again


These words come from scanned books.
Entering them helps digitize old texts.


Breaking news by e-mail

Start your day with top headlines in your inbox and get breaking news e-mail alerts at any time by subscribing to our Headlines e-mail newsletter.

See Sample | Privacy Policy
View All

Top Jobs


About our ads

About our ads

Copyright © 2009 Springfield News-Sun, Springfield, Ohio, USA.All rights reserved.

By using this site, you accept the terms of our Visitors Agreement and Privacy Policy. About our ads. You may wish to note our other business policies.