Al
Downing
Al Downing, who gave up Hank Aaron's record-breaking 715th homer, entered
baseball loaded with potential. His fastball exploded and his curveball danced.
Called by some "the black Sandy Koufax," he never lived up to that billing,
partly because of control problems and inconsistency and later because of arm
miseries, but for four seasons he was excellent.
Recalled from the minors to the Yankees for good in June 1963, Downing
maintained a summer-long electric pace of low-hit games. The first black
starting pitcher in club history allowed a scant 5.84 hits per nine innings and
finished with a 13-5 record. In 1964 he led the league with 217 strikeouts.
Downing in 1967 became a complete pitcher, cutting down on his walks, mastering
a changeup and mixing up his pitches. He finished 14-10 with the ninth-place
Yankees.
Pitching for the Dodgers in 1971, Downing reached the pinnacle, winning 20
games, including a league-leading five shutouts.
Al Downing (born June 28, 1941 in Trenton, New Jersey) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher who played for 17 seasons from 1961-1977. He entered the majors with the New York Yankees, and then played for the Oakland Athletics and Milwaukee Brewers before retiring with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Downing is most remembered for surrendering the record-breaking 715th home run hit by Hank Aaron on April 8, 1974.



|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||


