The Time Babe Ruth Played Chicken with a Concrete Wall

By Precious Sanders @pdsanders99

Library of Congress

On July 5, 1924, the Yankees found themselves in Washington’s Griffith Stadium for a doubleheader against the Senators.  In the fourth inning of game one, the Senators’ Joe Judge lined a ball just into the seats down the right-field line.  In pursuit of the line drive, Yankees right fielder Babe Ruth slammed right into the concrete wall and was knocked completely unconscious.  The New York Times described the event as follows:

The Babe ran into the pavilion parapet with the full force of his body, and dropped unconscious to the grass. Uniformed policeman ran to his assistance and kept back the crowd that seemed disposed to leave the chairs and get a close-up of the injured warrior. Several photographers happened to be on the spot and they snapped the Babe as Trainer Doc Woods ran up with the water bucket and the little black bag of first aid preparations.

At first it was thought that Ruth had been knocked out by a blow from the concrete on his chin, but it was sooon discovered that he had been knocked out by a jolt in the solar plexus. His left leg was also hurt at the hip.

In spite of the collision, once revived, Ruth refused to come out of the game.  He finished the game 3-for-3, and even went on to play the second game of the doubleheader.  According to the Washington Post:

The Bambino was knocked unconsciuos [sic] for about five minutes and badly bruised his left hip, but gamely insisted on sticking in that game and also in the second.

Talk about nerves of steel!  Any player knocked unconscious for five minutes today would be given no choice in the matter — he’d be carried off the field on a stretcher.