The Year Babe Ruth Hit 104 Home Runs

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AuthorBill Jenkinson
LanguageEnglish
GenreNon-fiction
The Year Babe Ruth Hit 104 Home Runs
First edition
AuthorBill Jenkinson
LanguageEnglish
SubjectsBaseball, Babe Ruth, Home Runs
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherCarroll & Graf Publishers
Publication date
2007
Publication placeUnited States
ISBN0-7867-1906-0
OCLC83609728

The Year Babe Ruth Hit 104 Home Runs is a 432-page non-fiction book by Bill Jenkinson published by Carroll & Graf Publishers in March 2007. The title refers to Jenkinson's conclusion that in modern ballparks under modern rules, Ruth would have hit 104 home runs in 1921, 90 in some other seasons, and over 60 many times. The author's research concludes that Ruth would have hit well over a thousand home runs in his career.[1]

According to the introduction, the book is not a Babe Ruth biography but is a factual treatise of Ruth's power and his dominance of the game of baseball.[2]

The book is in three major sections, "Part 1: The Career", "Part Two: The Analysis", and "Part Three: The Facts".

The first section is devoted to a year-by-year recap of Babe Ruth's career. It starts in 1914 and runs through Ruth's final season in 1935. Each chapter features personal highlights and picks out Ruth's longest home runs, essentially hitting the longest home run in every stadium he played in.

"The Analysis" section presents arguments about the comparative difficulty of playing in Ruth's era of longer fields versus playing on the shorter fields of modern stadiums. It covers traveling conditions and other factors of the differing eras, and includes a detailed recap of Ruth's so-called "hidden career" - his time playing exhibition games. The section also covers and illustrates Ruth's pure power.

The third section features charts, graphs and other detailed statistical information that backs up the data from the previous sections. Included in this section is a listing of every home run and long fly ball Ruth ever hit, aerial photographs of the stadiums Ruth played in, and final home run projections.

Tape measure home runs

Bill Jenkinson, the author

References

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