Hank Aaron Biography
This Hank Aaron biography is a carefully researched account
of the life of baseball player Hank Aaron. It is part of
Baseball Almanac's hall of fame biographical history series
and researched by historian Dennis Yuhasz.
"My boy has a chance to do it (break the Babe Ruth
career home run record). He takes care of himself and
nothing comes in front of baseball for Henry (Aaron).
Nothing. On days when he is feeling good, it's just too
bad for the pitchers." - Estella Aaron (Hank Aaron's
Mother)
Hank Aaron Biography
by Dennis Yuhasz
Copyright © 2005 Baseball Almanac,
Inc.
In 1999
Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig
announced the creation of "The
Hank Aaron Award", initially to honor the 25th
anniversary of
Hank Aaron breaking
Babe Ruth's career home run record. It has since
been awarded to the best overall hitter in the
National and American Leagues, establishing itself as
a fitting tribute to a man arguably recognized as
baseball's most complete performer, and premier
example of the definition of the games five tool
player (hit, hit with power, field, throw, run).
Born in Mobile, Alabama on February
5, 1934,
Hank Aaron never played high school baseball and
began his playing career in semi-pro ball before
moving on to the Negro Leagues to play shortstop for
the Indianapolis Clowns, where his talent and ability
were quickly noticed. "He's a natural born ballplayer.
God done sent me something," said Clowns Manager
Buster Haywood. While trying out for the Clowns,
Aaron was scouted by the
Boston Braves Dewey Griggs and eventually the
Braves won out over the
Giants for his services. In 1952 he was named the
Northern League's Rookie of the Year, despite playing
in just 87 games, batting .336. The following year he
was promoted to the South Atlantic League (that
circuit's first African-American player) and earned
Most Valuable Player honors by winning the batting
title (.362), and leading the league in runs batted in
(125), runs (115) and hits (208).
Aaron
began his major league career in 1954 (he was the last
Negro League player to play in the major leagues) when
a spring training injury to
Bobby Thomson opened up a spot on the
Braves roster. After going 0-5 in his debut on
April 13, he settled in and connected for his first
career home run off
Vic Raschi ten days later. He finished the season
with a respectable .280 average. In 1955 he blossomed
into one of the game's best players batting .314 with
27 home runs and 106 runs batted in. He won his first
of two National League
batting titles in 1956 with a .328 mark and
reached the 200 hit plateau for the first time. It all
came together for
Aaron and the
Braves in 1957 as
Milwaukee won the NL pennant (with
Aaron homering to clinch it.)
Hank claimed the Leagues
MVP Award and just missing out on winning the
Triple Crown, leading in HR (44) and RBI (132),
while finishing third in batting with a .322 average.
Then it was on to the
World Series,
Aaron's first appearance on the national scene,
and the now star player didn't disappoint. Playing
against a superstar he was to be compared with in
future years,
Mickey Mantle,
Hank responded with a .393 average, three home
runs and seven RBI as the
Braves upset the mighty
Yankees in seven games to claim baseball's world
championship. 1958 saw the
Braves once again win the pennant, but despite
another fine
World Series performance by
Aaron (he batted .333),
Milwaukee fell to the
Yankees in a
seventh and deciding game.
By this time
Hank was posting, season after season, the
consistent great numbers that were to become his
trademark. Another
batting title was won in 1959 (.355), and he also
led the league in slugging (.636) and had his only
lifetime three home run game versus the Giants. As his
career moved into the sixties he again just missed
winning the
Triple Crown in 1963 with league leading totals in
HR (44) and RBI (130), while settling for third in
batting average (.319). That year he also joined
baseball's exclusive
30/30 club (30 home runs, 30 stolen bases) by
stealing 31 bases. Keeping himself in peak physical
condition, a typical
Aaron season for 19 years was to average 33 HR,
drive in and score 100 runs or more, and hit .300.
Hank often attributed his remarkable consistency
to something
Jackie Robinson had said to him early in his
career. "He said, baseball was a game you played every
day, not once a week," said
Aaron speaking of
Robinson. While many times being overlooked by
fans and media when compared to other flashy stars in
the 1960's, such as
Willie Mays and
Roberto Clemente,
Aaron was often given his due praise from his
competitors. Once after
Dodger Hall of Famer
Sandy Koufax had struck out young Brave's hitting
star
Rico Carty three times in one particular game, the
shook up youngster confronted
Koufax. "You mad at me,
Koufax?" asked
Carty.
Sandy replied "Young man, I don't even know you,
but as long as you're hitting in front of
Henry Aaron, you're going to have a tough time
with me." In 1966 the
Braves moved to
Atlanta and
Hank didn't disappoint his new fans as he clubbed
44 HR and drove in 127 runs. 1969 saw baseball
introduce divisional play and
Aaron and the
Braves were the first winners of the National
League's Western Division.
Hank put up his usual consistent great numbers for
the season and, despite his team being swept by the
eventual
World Champion Mets, he homered in all three games
of the first National League Championship Series, and
batted .357 with seven RBI against the young, hard
throwing New York pitching staff.
Continued success came to
Hank Aaron in the 1970's as he collected his
3000th hit (the first player with
500 home runs to do so) in 1970, attained career
highs with a .669 slugging percentage and 47 HR in
1971, and accumulated his 2000th lifetime RBI in 1972.
His career home run total reached 639, moving him to
third on the
all time career HR list behind
Willie Mays and
Babe Ruth. He was now a clear threat to break what
many thought was the insurmountable
Ruth total of 714 career HR. "As far as I'm
concerned,
Aaron is the best ball player of my era…He is to
baseball of the last 15 years what
Joe DiMaggio was before him," said
Mickey Mantle in 1970. While chasing the
Ruth mark
Aaron continued to speak out and seek racial
equality in baseball. He often criticized the game for
not having a minority manager and minorities in front
office positions. "On the field, Blacks have been able
to be super giants. But, once our playing days are
over, this is the end of it and we go back to the back
of the bus again." said
Hank. Sadly, the speaking out and the color of his
skin deemed
Aaron undeserving of
Ruth's hallowed record to many, who showered him
and his family with insults at games and death threats
through the mail.
Hank persevered and, after slamming 40 HR at the
age of 39 in 1973, he stood on the threshold of
breaking a record few thought would ever be broken.
As if he didn't have enough
distractions in his pursuit of
Ruth's mark,
Aaron faced another controversy as the
Braves announced at the start of the 1974 season
that
Hank would not play in any of the games of the
their opening series against the
Reds in Cincinnati in hopes of
Aaron tying and breaking the record in
Atlanta the following week. Then MLB Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn intervened and ordered the
Braves, "in the best interests of baseball", to
play
Aaron in at least two of the three games versus
the
Reds. So
Hank was in the lineup for the opener against the
Reds on
April 4. 1974 and rose to the occasion in the
first inning, lining a
Jack Billingham pitch over the left field fence to
join the
Babe at 714.
Aaron played one of the other two games in
Cincinnati and did not homer, so the stage was set for
the record breaker to be hit at home. On Monday night,
April 8, 1974, against the
Dodgers before a National TV audience, in the
bottom of the fourth inning,
Hank stroked a 1-0
Al Downing pitch over the left field fence for his
715th career homer and baseball history was made.
Aaron
finished 1974 with just 20 home runs and after the
season was traded to the American League's
Milwaukee Brewers, enabling him to finish his
career in the city he had helped bring many baseball
memories. His playing days ended after the 1976 season
and along with his all time total of 755 home runs he
holds Major League lifetime marks for runs batted in
(2,297), extra base hits (1,477), and total bases
(6,856). He ranks second in at bats (12,364) and
intentional walks (293), is third in runs (2,174 tied
with Ruth), games (3,298), and hits (3771), fourth in
sacrifice flies (121), and ninth in doubles (624). He
hit .300 or better in 14 seasons (winning two National
League batting titles), led the NL in hits twice, won
three NL home run crowns (and tied for a fourth),
slugged 40 HR's or more eight times, hit 20 or more
homers 20 consecutive years, drove in 100 runs on 11
occasions (leading the NL four times), led the NL in
slugging percentage four seasons, never struck out 100
times in a year, scored 100 runs in 13 seasons
(topping the NL three times), and won three
Gold Gloves.
After his retirement as an active
player in 1976,
Hank Aaron returned to
Braves in the front office capacity of Vice
President of Player Development. His overseeing of
young talent such as former NL MVP
Dale Murphy was instrumental in the
Braves winning the NL Western Division in 1982.
Since 1989 he has served the Braves as Senior Vice
President and Assistant to the President. He was
elected to the Hall of Fame in 1982 and was named to
Baseball's
All-Century Team in 1999.
Hank Aaron Biography Sources
Sources:
Hank Aaron and Lonnie Wheeler,
I had a Hammer: The Hank Aaron Story, Sagebrush
Education Resources, 1992
Jane Leavy,
Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy, Harper Collins
Publishers, 2002
Atlanta Braves Media Guide, 2004
www.baseball-almanac.com
www.baseballindex.org
www.brainyquote.com
www.rationalpastimes.com
espn.go.com
www.retrosheet.org
This Hank Aaron
biography was researched & written by historian
Dennis Yuhasz exclusively for Baseball Almanac
and no part may be reproduced without our written
permission.
Did you know that
Hank Aaron,
Barry Bonds &
Babe Ruth all hit career home run number
seven-hundred during the same inning?
Aaron connected on
July 21, 1973, in the third inning off Phillies
pitcher
Ken Brett;
Bonds connected on
September 17, 2003, in the third inning off
Padres pitcher
Jake Peavy;
Ruth connected on July 13, 1934 in the third
inning off Tigers pitcher
Tommy Bridges.
American History
(Bryan Ethier, June 1999 Issue) magazine once did an
interview with
Hank Aaron and asked, "You've sometimes alluded
to how difficult the 1973 season was for you."
Aaron cooly replied, "The only thing I can say
is that I had a rough time with it. I don't talk
about it much. It still hurts a little bit inside,
because I think it has chipped away at a part of my
life that I will never have again. I didn't enjoy
myself. It was hard for me to enjoy something that I
think I worked very hard for. God had given me the
ability to play baseball, and people in this country
kind of chipped away at me. So, it was tough. And
all of those things happened simply because I was a
black person."