sign outside Wrigley Field, as seen during the 1935 World Series, three years after the "Called Shot." Note the 440-foot marker in the center field corner. Ruth's hit went to the right of it and farther back. Eyewitness accounts were equally inconclusive and widely varied, with some of the opinions possibly skewed by partisanship: • "Don't let anybody tell you differently. Babe definitely pointed." — Cubs public-address announcer
Pat Pieper (As public-address announcer Pieper sat next to the wall separating the field from the stands, between home plate and third base. In 1966 he spoke with the
Chicago Tribune "In the Wake of the News" sports columnist David Condon: "Pat remembers sitting on the third base side and hearing [Cubs' pitcher]
Guy Bush chide Ruth, who had taken two strikes. According to Pat, Ruth told Bush: 'That's strike two, all right. But watch this.' 'Then Ruth pointed to center field, and hit his homer,' Pat continued. 'You bet your life Babe Ruth called it.'") • "My dad took me to see the World Series, and we were sitting behind third base, not too far back.... Ruth did point to the center-field scoreboard. And he did hit the ball out of the park after he pointed with his bat. So it really happened," stated
Associate Justice John Paul Stevens,
United States Supreme Court. • "What do you think of the nerve of that big monkey. Imagine the guy calling his shot and getting away with it." – Lou Gehrig • The Commissioner of Baseball,
Kenesaw Mountain Landis, attended the game with his young nephew, and both had a clear view of the action at home plate. Landis himself never commented on whether he believed Ruth called the shot, but his nephew believes that Ruth did not call it. •
Shirley Povich,
The Washington Post columnist, interviewed Hall-of-Fame catcher
Bill Dickey. "Ruth was just mad about that quick pitch, Dickey explained. He was pointing at Root, not at the centerfield stands. He called him a couple of names and said, "Don't do that to me anymore, you blankety-blank." • Ray Kelly, Ruth's guest for the game, said, "He absolutely did it ... I was right there. Never in doubt." •
Erle V. Painter, the Yankees athletic trainer at the time, shared his recollection of the shot with the
Baseball Hall of Fame. He stated, "Ruth made a three-quarter turn to the stands and held up one finger. It was plain he was signifying one strike didn't mean he was out.
Root put over another strike and the Babe repeated the pantomime, holding up two fingers this time. Then, before taking his stance, he swept his left arm full length and pointed to the centerfield fence." The called shot particularly irked Root. He had a fine career, winning over 200 games, but he would be forever remembered as the pitcher who gave up the "called shot", much to his annoyance. When he was asked to play himself in the 1948 film
The Babe Ruth Story, Root turned it down when he learned that Ruth's pointing to
center field would be in the film. Said Root, "Ruth did not point at the fence before he swung. If he had made a gesture like that, well, anybody who knows me knows that Ruth would have ended up on his ass [via a
brushback pitch]. The legend didn't get started until later." Root's teammate, catcher
Gabby Hartnett, also denied that Ruth called the shot. On the other hand, according to baseball historian and author Michael Bryson, it is noted that at that point in the game, Ruth pointed toward the outfield to draw attention to a loose board that was swinging free. Some people may have misinterpreted this as a "called shot", but Cubs personnel knew exactly what he was pointing to, and hammered the board back into place. In 1942, during the making of
The Pride of the Yankees,
Babe Herman (who was at that time a teammate of Ruth with the minor league
Hollywood Stars) was on the movie set as a double for both Ruth (who played himself in most scenes) and Gary Cooper (who played
Lou Gehrig). Herman re-introduced Root and Ruth on set and the following exchange (later recounted by Herman to baseball historian
Donald Honig) took place: • Root: "You never pointed out to center field before you hit that ball off me, did you?" • Ruth: "I know I didn't, but it made a hell of a story, didn't it?" Root went to his grave vehemently denying that Ruth ever pointed to center field. ==Rediscovered 16-mm films==