It happened so quickly -- almost in the blink of an eye -- that Carroll Hardy remembers precious few details.
It seemed so insignificant.
It happened so quickly -- almost in the blink of an eye -- that Carroll Hardy remembers precious few details.
It seemed so insignificant.
"Nobody thought a thing about it," Hardy says. "It wasn't a big deal, that's for sure."
The date was Sept. 20, 1960.
Hardy, a baseball journeyman, was nestled into his usual spot on the bench. The reserve outfielder and his Boston Red Sox teammates were in Baltimore, where Ted Williams was playing out the final days of his Hall of Fame career.
Williams, arguably the greatest hitter in baseball history, stepped to the plate in the first inning against Orioles starter Hal "Skinny" Brown and promptly fouled a pitch off his instep.
"It hurt him so badly," Hardy says of the Splendid Splinter, "that he limped off the field, through the dugout and up into the clubhouse. They said, 'Hardy, get a bat; you're the hitter.' So I grabbed a bat and ran out there and hit into a double play."
And that was that.
Or so Hardy thought.
It wasn't until months later, when a Boston sportswriter called to tell him, that Hardy realized he had achieved trivia immortality: He was the only player ever to pinch-hit for Ted Williams.
"I had no idea," he says.
For Hardy, now a 76-year-old grandfather living in Longmont, Colo., things like that just sort of happened.
His long career in professional sports, as a player and executive, had sort of a Forrest Gump quality to it.
"It wasn't just Ted," Hardy says.
In 1955, in his only season as a running back and wide receiver for the San Francisco 49ers, Hardy caught touchdown passes from Hall of Fame quarterback Y.A. Tittle.
Three years later, with the Cleveland Indians, he hit his first major league home run -- as a pinch-hitter for Roger Maris.
Hardy also played a role in Williams' major league finale. Williams, after hitting a home run in his final at-bat, briefly took the field in the ninth inning at Fenway Park before Hardy was summoned to replace him.
"They booed me all the way out," Hardy notes, repeating a line he has trotted out before, "and cheered him all the way in."
The next year, Hardy pinch-hit three times for rookie Carl Yastrzemski, another future Hall of Famer, and went two for three. (Yaz was lifted for a pinch-hitter 48 times in his career.)
Then, after leaving baseball in 1967, Hardy spent 20 years as a player personnel executive with the Denver Broncos, helping put together three teams that reached the Super Bowl.