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Willie Howard Mays Jr. was born in Westfield, Alabama, on May 6, 1931, and raised in nearby Fairfield, a steel-mill town on the outskirts of Birmingham, the offspring of two athletic stars. His father, Willie "Cat" Mays Sr., had been a Negro League player, and his mother Annie had been a champion sprinter in high school. From the time Mays was a toddler he was an athletic prodigy. Known as "Buck," by family and friends, Mays exhibited athletic brilliance when he was 10, as a bat boy who played first base in the final two innings of sandlot games in the Birmingham Industrial League for the Fairfield Stars. Mays lacked the size to be a power hitter in his early teens, but he did display extraordinary skills in running, fielding, and throwing—skills for which Mays is best remembered by major league fans. At the all-black Fairfield Industrial High School, Mays was also a star quarterback and basketball player but concentrated his talents on baseball.
With the Fairfield Stars, Mays quickly made the starting lineup as shortstop before moving up to professional baseball in 1946, as a 15-year-old outfielder briefly playing for the New York Cubans. In 1947, Mays also temporarily played for the Chattanooga Choo Choos, before joining the Negro Leagues' Birmingham Black Barons on a more permanent basis. With the Barons, Mays made $250 a month to play on a part-time basis, so that he could attend and graduate from high school. While in high school, Mays played professional baseball on weekends and attended classes during the week. In 1947, Jackie Robinson brought hope to all black athletes by breaking Major League Baseball's color barrier, signing with the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Like Robinson, Mays encountered segregation and racism. He received much-needed guidance from his father and his uncle, as well as from Black Barons manager Pepper Davis,
who made sure Mays stayed focused on baseball while he matured as a player. Davis's guidance was especially helpful with Mays's
hitting, and Davis taught him to be patient as he was learning ![]()
Mays's major league debut came on May 25, 1951, and began with a rocky start. In his first seven games he had one hit in 26 at-bats, a .036 batting average, which had the uncertain 22-year-old prodigy in tears and wondering if he was going to last longer than a week. After receiving reassurances from Giants manager Leo Durocher that Mays was his center fielder, Mays blossomed into the "Say Hey Kid." The nickname was allegedly given to Mays that year by New York Journal American sportswriter Barney Kremenko, after he heard Mays utter "'Say who,' 'Say what,' 'Say where,' 'Say hey,'" in reference to him not knowing his teammates' names when he first joined the Giants. Even during his hitting slump, Mays displayed brilliance as a fielder. His batting quickly matured, however, and he soon had an average of .274, with 20 home runs and 68 RBIs in 121 games. In 1951 he was named the National League's Rookie of the Year and led the Giants in a miraculous come-from-behind National League pennant win over the rival Brooklyn Dodgers.
In 1952 Mays was drafted into the U.S. Army to serve during the Korean War. He never saw combat and continued to hone his baseball skills playing at Fort Eustis in Newport News, Virginia. Although Mays estimated that he lost 70 to 80 home runs during his two-year stint in the Army, he was a player who managed himself into a great hitter.
Mays's return to the Giants in 1954 was eagerly anticipated and did not disappoint the fans. He led the National League with a .345 batting average, 41 home runs, 110 RBIs, 13 triples, and scored 119 runs on his way to becoming the Most Valuable Player and leading the Giants to a World Series title over the favored Cleveland Indians. The most memorable moment in Mays' career occurred in the first game of the series, when he made a running, over-the-shoulder catch at the warning track off of a long hit by Vic Wertz. Popularly known as "The Catch," Mays spoke of the play as "The Throw." He believed the catch was routine, but the immediate stop and U-turn throw in a tied eighth inning, with runners on first and second, allowed only one runner to advance without scoring. The play was the key to the Giants winning the game and sweeping the Series.
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Mays was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, in 1979, the same year he became embroiled in controversy. In 1979 Mays and Mantle were banned from baseball by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn for working as goodwill ambassadors with Park Place Casino (now Bally's Casino Resort) in Atlantic City, violating the league's rules on gambling. In 1985, both men were reinstated by the next commissioner, Peter Ueberroth.
Since 1986 Mays has worked in the lifetime position of Special Assistant to the President of the San Francisco Giants. In recent years, Mays and his jersey number 24 have been immortalized at the Giants' new stadium, Pacific Bell Park. There, a nine-foot tall bronze statue of Mays presides over the main plaza at the stadium's address, 24 Willie Mays Plaza, surrounded by 24 palm trees, and the stadium's right-field wall stands at a height of 24 feet.
These accomplishments are amazing, considering that, until Jackie Robinson appeared, Mays assumed he would work in the Birmingham steel mills and play in the Negro Leagues as his father had done. Throughout his career, the only things that shone brighter than the Say Hey Kid's grace and brilliance as an athlete were his smile and his love for baseball.
Additional Resources
Einstein, Charles. Willie's Time: Baseball's Golden Age. Carbondale, Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press, 2004.
Linge, Mary Kay. Willie Mays: A Biography. New York: Greenwood Press, 2005.
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum and Kansas State University College of Education, Willie Mays (URL: http://www.coe.ksu.edu/nlbemuseum/ history/players/mays.html)
San Francisco Chronicle, "May at 75: The Say Hey Kid has lots of fond memories, few regrets" (URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f= /c/a/2006/05/03/SPGV1IJEEB1.DTL)
Academy of Achievement, "Willie Mays Interview: Baseball Hall of Fame" (URL: http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/may0int-1)
Herbert G. Ruffin
Claremont Graduate University
Published July 25, 2007
Last updated November 9, 2009