Ok he didn't hit a homer 734 feet, thats 244 yards.....ridiculous! Josh Gibson of the ***** leagues is a sleeper for most powerful of all time.
2007-11-16 07:53:27
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answer #1
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answered by The Reverend 4
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You are right, but the 754' HR was calculated bast on its trajectory because it hit the very top edge, behind all the seats, of Yankee Stadium while it was still going up, had it not hit the back of the Stadium it would have gone about 734' not 754'. It happened on May 22, 1963, in the 11th inning. Click link to look at picture.
The longest measured home run in a Major League Game is 193 meters (634 ft) by Mickey Mantle (USA), when playing for the New York Yankees against the Detroit Tigers at Briggs Stadium, Detroit, Michigan, USA, on September 10, 1960.
On April 17, 1953, Mickey Mantle is credited with what many consider to be the longest HR in baseball history. He is estimated to have hit a 656 foot home run at Washington's Griffith Stadium off Senator's pitcher Chuck Stobbs.
Mark McGuire's longest home run was a mere 545 feet, May 16 1998 in Busch Stadium, St. Louis.
2007-11-16 08:03:28
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answer #2
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answered by pedrooch 4
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I think that he was if you go by the sheer distance of his blasts. Up until he came along, there were some monster hitters, but I don't think even their blasts could hold up to the "Mick". His are still talked about today. But I'd liked to have seen Willie McCovey get one as high as McGwire, Bonds, or Mantle. That would be a mammoth shot, but unfortunately most of his home runs were line drives. I once saw one on TV that he hit that probably didn't take 2 seconds to leave his bat & be over the wall.
2007-11-19 09:49:58
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answer #3
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answered by Mike 1
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actual perfect change hitter ever, for a era of time he changed into between the perfect hitters interior the game. the in difficulty-free words reason I hesitate to say the perfect is using a particular guy named Willie Mays who performed round a similar time as him. it could be unfair to guage him entirely by ability of his occupation stats for the reason that he performed maximum of his occupation in excruciating soreness. In which have he's like the Joe Namath of baseball, even regardless of the reality that he of route had extra fulfillment than Joe. the perfect diagnosis is, interior the mid 50s there wasn't all and assorted else you would go with on the plate than the Mick.
2016-10-24 08:40:14
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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of course he was the strongest righty and lefty and he was also the fastest runner in the history of baseball, sorry prime time sanders and bo jackson but Mantle's speed to first base from the right handed batter's box was faster than anyone had ever run it from the left handed batter's box (other than himself!). He hit two home runs during exhibition games at USC and last word was the telescope at Mt. Polamar had picked up the balls in flight.
2014-10-01 03:45:45
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answer #5
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answered by ? 1
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Whats amazing about Mantle is not only how he managed to played with a body that soon became a train wreck, but that he hit the kind of home runs he did when weightlifting (forget steroids) was forbidden to baseballers. Potentially, he may have been the greatest ever to play the game-but his off-the-field habits, coupled with multiple physical problems limited his career.
2007-11-16 12:36:10
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answer #6
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answered by Buffalo1 4
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Greg Luzinski Longest Home Run
2017-01-15 13:56:38
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answer #7
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answered by ? 4
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Yes and no...
As a Yanks fan, I'd like to say "yes" right away. But, I've seen so many -- and know that they just didn't measure them in the older generations. Mantle is always going to be remembered as one of them, with good reason -- and he had a powerful, compact swing. But, there's guys like Hank Greenberg, Lou Gehrig, Greg Luzinski, Harmon Killebrew, Jose Canseco don't forget was monster too, Jimmie Foxx, Frank Howard, Ralph Kiner, Willie Stargell, Willie McCovey, Richie Allen who's too easily overlooked, Dave Kingman who was a monster that they ranout of MLB during the time of collusion because he would have been a Hall of Famer that couldn't catch and struck out, Reggie Jackson of course made it a decade & a half later (go figure), Frank Robinson and even Joe DiMaggio to consider (you realize how far those stadium walls where?).
2007-11-16 07:46:16
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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You better go back and do a little more research on your numbers since no one in the history of the game has hit a 734 foot homerun.
2007-11-16 08:18:04
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answer #9
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answered by Frizzer 7
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NO ONE has ever hit one 734 feet, many of Mantles "record" home runs have been exagerated and upon rechecking many have been shown to be just over 500 feet which is still extraordinary! I would still agree that he is one of the most powerful HR hitters of all time!
2007-11-16 07:52:10
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answer #10
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answered by bdough15 6
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