The Boys of Summer Hodges was called up to Brooklyn in 1947, the same year that
Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier. He played as a catcher, joining the team's nucleus of Robinson,
Pee Wee Reese and
Carl Furillo. Hodges's only appearance in the
1947 World Series against the
New York Yankees was as a
pinch hitter for
pitcher Rex Barney in Game Seven, but he
struck out. With the emergence of
Roy Campanella behind the plate and Robinson's move to second base in , manager
Leo Durocher shifted Hodges to first base, and he
batted .249 with 11 home runs and 70 runs batted in during his rookie season. On August 31, 1950, against the
Boston Braves, Hodges joined
Lou Gehrig as only the second player since 1900 to hit
four home runs in a game without the benefit of extra innings; he hit them against four different pitchers, with the first coming off
Warren Spahn. He also had seventeen total bases in the game, tied for third-most in Major League history. That year he also led the league in fielding (.994) and set an NL record with 159 double plays, breaking
Frank McCormick's mark of 153 with the
1939 Cincinnati Reds He finished 1950 third in the league in both homers (32) and runs batted in (113), and came in eighth in the
Most Valuable Player voting. That year, Hodges broke his own record for most double plays with 171, a record which stood until
Donn Clendenon had 182 for the 1966
Pittsburgh Pirates; he also led the NL with 126 assists, and was second in home runs, third in
runs (118) and
total bases (307), fifth in
slugging percentage (.527), and sixth in runs batted in (103). Hodges was also involved in a blown call in Game 5.
Johnny Sain was batting for the Yankees in the 10th inning of Game 5 and grounded out, as ruled by first base umpire
Art Passarella. The photograph of the play, however, shows Sain stepping on first base while Hodges, also with a foot on the bag, is reaching for the ball that is about a foot shy of entering his glove. Baseball commissioner
Ford Frick, an ex-newspaperman himself, refused to defend Passarella. When Hodges's slump continued into the
1953 season, fans reacted with countless letters and good-luck gifts. One Brooklyn priest, Father Herbert Redmond of St. Francis Roman Catholic Church, told his flock: "It's too hot for a sermon today. Go home, keep the commandments, and say a prayer for Gil Hodges." Hodges began hitting again soon afterward, and rarely struggled again in the World Series. Teammate
Carl Erskine, who described himself as a good Baptist, kidded him by saying, "Gil, you just about made a believer out of me." Hodges ended 1953 with a .302 batting average, finishing fifth in the NL in runs batted in (122) and sixth in home runs (31). Against the Yankees in the
1953 Series, Hodges hit .364; he had three
hits, including a homer in the 9–5 Game 1 loss. In 1954, under their new manager
Walter Alston, Hodges had the best year of his career with career-highs in batting average with .304, 176 hits, 130 runs batted in, and 42 home runs and again leading the NL in putouts (1,381) and assists (132). He also set a still-standing record with 19
sacrifice flies. He was second in the league to
Ted Kluszewski in home runs and runs batted in (130), fifth in total bases (335), and sixth in slugging (.579) and runs (106), and placed tenth in the Most Valuable Player vote. In 1956, Hodges recorded 32 home runs and 87 runs batted in. Brooklyn won the pennant again, and once more met the Yankees in the
World Series, but ended up losing in seven games. In the third inning of Game 1, he hit a three-run homer to put Brooklyn ahead, 5–2, as they went on to a 6–3 win; he had three hits and four runs batted in during the 13–8 slugfest in Game 2, scoring to give the Dodgers a 7–6 lead in the third and
doubling in two runs each in the fourth and fifth innings for an 11–7 lead. In
Don Larsen's
perfect game, Hodges struck out, flied to center, and lined to third base, as Brooklyn went on to lose in seven games. In 1957, Hodges set the NL record for career grand slams, breaking the mark of 12 shared by
Rogers Hornsby and
Ralph Kiner; his final total of 14 was tied by
Hank Aaron and
Willie McCovey in 1972, and broken by Aaron in 1974. He finished seventh in the NL with a .299 batting average and fifth with 98 runs batted in, and leading the league with 1,317 putouts. He was also among the NL's top ten players in home runs (27), hits (173), runs (94),
triples (7), slugging (.511) and total bases (296); in late September, he drove in the last Dodgers run at Ebbets Field, and the last run in Brooklyn history. Hodges was named to his last All-Star team and placed seventh in the Most Valuable Player balloting, the highest position in his career. In 1960, Hodges broke
Ralph Kiner's NL record for right-handed hitters of 351 career home runs, and appeared on the TV program
Home Run Derby. In his last season with the Dodgers in 1961, he became the team's career runs batted in leader with 1,254, passing
Zack Wheat; Snider moved ahead of him the following year. Hodges received the first three Rawlings Gold Glove Awards, from 1957 to 1959. During
spring training 1961, Hodges gave what was one of his biggest contributions to the Dodgers. Manager
Walter Alston had appointed him acting manager for a B-squad game, against the
Minnesota Twins in
Orlando, Florida. Upon discovering that one of their pitchers,
Ed Palmquist, had missed the flight, Hodges told that day's starter,
Sandy Koufax that he would have to pitch seven innings instead of the previously planned five. The game ended up becoming a turning point in Koufax's career; after struggling with his control to start the game, he ended up pitching seven no-hit innings; Koufax went on to have a strong spring training and a breakthrough season in . Hodges himself was unable to manage the game, however, since he had been beaned during batting practice.
Return to New York in 1963 After being chosen in the
1961 MLB Expansion Draft, Hodges was one of the original 1962 Mets and, despite knee problems, was persuaded to continue his playing career in New York, hitting the first home run in franchise history. By the end of the year, in which he played only 54 games, he ranked tenth in MLB history with 370 home runs – second to only
Jimmie Foxx among right-handed hitters. He also held the
National League (NL) record for career
home runs by a right-handed hitter from 1960 to 1963, and held the NL record for career
grand slams from 1957 to 1974. After 11 games with the Mets in 1963, during which he batted .227 with no homers and was plagued by injuries, he was traded to the
Washington Senators in late May so that he could replace
Mickey Vernon as Washington's manager. Hodges immediately announced his retirement from playing in order to focus on his new position. His last game had been on May 5 in a
doubleheader hosting the
San Francisco Giants.
Career overall An eight-time All-Star, Hodges batted .273 in his career with a .487 slugging percentage, 1,921 hits, 1,274 runs batted in, 1,105 runs, 370 home runs, 295 doubles and 63
stolen bases in 2,071 games. His 361 home runs with the Dodgers remain second in team history to Snider's 389. His 1,614 career double plays placed him behind only
Charlie Grimm (1733) in NL history, and were a major league record for a right-handed fielding first baseman until
Chris Chambliss surpassed him in 1984. His 1,281 career assists ranked second in league history to
Fred Tenney's 1,363, and trailed only
Ed Konetchy's 1,292 among all right-handed first basemen. At the start of the 1963 season, prior to his retirement, Hodges had hit the most home runs (370) by a right-handed batter up to that point in time (surpassed by
Willie Mays just before Hodges retired, on April 19) and the most career grand slams (14) by a National League player (surpassed by
Willie McCovey's 18 grand slams). He shares the major league record of having hit four home runs in a single game (only 18 players have done so in Major League history). ==Managerial career==