‘An ordinary game on an ordinary day on Planet Earth’

Yankees sidearm pitcher Jack Aker zipped a strike over the plate to run the count to a ball and two strikes on Washington third baseman Ken McMullen. Catcher Jake Gibbs causally stood and tossed the ball back to the mound. McMullen took the umpire’s call in stride as he looked back over his left shoulder, toward the dugout.

It was an ordinary sequence in a seemingly ordinary July contest.

Seconds after the pitch, however, the humdrum of the moment gave way to an exhilarating moment unusual to ballparks. Umpire Ron Luciano walked from behind home plate, waved his arms in the air to stop play.

It was 4:18 p.m.

Over the ballpark speakers, public address announcer Bob Sheppard spoke to the 34,000 or so people inside the ballpark. While it may have been a typical day for the players, high above the famous Yankee Stadium façade, beyond the clouds and up among the stars, something extraordinary was happening.

New York Times

“Ladies and gentlemen, your attention please…”

Sheppard’s words echoed throughout the enormous ballpark on East 161st and River Avenue.

Many, if not all, likely felt the gravity of the moment and knew the reason Sheppard’s voice, a smooth baritone that in the years to come would be called the voice of God, had suddenly permeated the park, commanding attention.

The game was tied 2-2 in the eighth and the Senators had runners on the corners with no one out. While caught up in the moment of the game, many, too, were concerned for those three brave astronauts soaring miles above the cloudy, 71-degree Bronx day, in the cold, dark depths beyond the Earth’s atmosphere.

All ears tuned to Sheppard as he continued.

“You will be happy to know that the Apollo 11 has landed safely…”

Those remarkable 13 words were all fans needed to hear. They erupted with joy, likely missing Sheppard’s last three words: “…on the moon.” The crowd cheered for a good 45 seconds, many waved bats – it was Bat Day again at Yankee Stadium – while reading the scoreboard message that confirmed Shepard’s announcement.

“Theyre (sic) on the moon,” the scoreboard displayed, sans apostrophe in the contraction. Sheppard kept reading, but his words were mostly inaudible by the cheering for the astronauts who had just become the first humans to land on the lunar surface.

Word had traveled quickly from the moon, back to NASA headquarters in Houston and then to the Bronx were Sheppard spoke. As soon as the lunar module landed, astronaut Neil Armstrong radioed confirmation back to Earth.

It was 4:17:40 p.m. Eastern daylight time, seconds ahead of Sheppard’s announcement.

“Houston,” he said, “Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.”

While elation in the stands was soaring to 240,000 miles above the Earth, most of the players did not look at the scoreboard and “seemed confused and impatient,” Leonard Koppett wrote in the New York Times.

Sheppard asked for a moment of silent prayer for the astronauts’ safety. Stadium organist Eddie Layton followed the silence with his rendition of “American the Beautiful.”

The game resumed and Aker got McMullen to hit a bouncer to third baseman Jerry Kenney. He threw home to nab Mike Epstein racing in from third for the first out.

It was 4:21 p.m.

Moments later, after Aker hit Hank Allen with a pitch, the Yankees got out of the jam with an inning-ending double play that started with a bouncer back to the pitcher. Aker threw home to Gibbs who fired the ball to first baseman Jimmie Hall.

The tension on the diamond had suddenly dissipated, for now.

It had begun to fester, however, more than two hours earlier, at 2:02 p.m., when Yankees starter Bill Burbach delivered the game’s first pitches and got Washington lead-off hitter Del Unser to fly out to center field.

The New York right-hander subsequently retired the next two Senators on fly balls to center and left field, respectively, for a quick 1-2-3 inning. It happened about 20 minutes after Armstrong, at 1:50 p.m., had set lose the lunar module from the command ship and piloted it toward the moon.

“Eagle has wings,” Armstrong radioed to headquarters.

The Yankees’ offense made some noise in the bottom of the first but never took flight. Horace Clarke led off with a walk and stole second two batters later. After Bobby Murcer flew out to center for the second out, Roy White walked to put runners on first and second. The Yankees had their chances, but Washington starter Jim Hannan struck out Jimmie Hall to end the threat.

In the top of the second, Washington slugger Frank Howard punched a single past short, and McMullen slapped a pitch to center to put runners on first and second. Bernie Allen hit a Burbach pitch to deep right for an out. Howard tagged and advanced to third; McMullen remained at first.

Ed Brinkman knocked home the game’s first run with a grounder to short. Gene Michael misplayed “a made-to-order DP grounder,” and Howard scored, Dana Mozley wrote in the New York Daily News. Burbach struck out Ed Brinkman, but with the bases loaded, walked home McMullen for another run. The Senators led 2-0.

In the bottom of the second, Michael atoned for his fielding miscue with a single through short. After Ron Woods lined out, and with Gibbs batting, Michael stole second. Gibbs hit a slow grounder to second baseman Bernie Allen, who fielded it cleanly, but his throw missed Epstein at first. Michael alertly dashed home to score the run, cutting the Senators’ advantage to 2-1.

In the top of the third, a couple of Burbach walks and a passed ball loaded the bases with Senators. It was enough for Yankees’ skipper Ralph Houk to bring in Steve Hamilton to replace Burbach. The lefty promptly worked his way out of this bases-loaded, two-out jam by striking out Washington catcher Jim French.

Burbach left the game having pitched 2 2/3 innings, giving up two runs – only one of those earned – two strike outs and three walks.

Singles from Hall and Michael in the fourth put the Yankees in position to tie the game or, possibly, go ahead. Now with the Yankees having two runners on base, Senators manager Ted Williams brought in Bob Humphreys in relief for Hannan.

Humphreys forced Woods to fly out to right, and Hall advanced to third. The Senators’ reliever then tried to pick off Michael at first, but threw the ball past first baseman Epstein and to the wall. Hall darted home to tie the game at 2-2. Michael, however, was thrown out at second.

Meanwhile, as the innings wore on, tense moments continued between Houston and the moon.

At one point, silence between the two lasted for minutes, but it probably seemed like days. Soon, though, communication was established with Lieut. Col. Michael Collins who piloted the command ship. “Listen, baby, things are going just swimmingly, just beautiful,” he said.

The clock read 3:46 p.m.

It was another suspenseful two minutes before mission control heard from Armstrong as he took manual control of the module, avoided craters the size of a football field, and – with his heart racing to a 156 beats per second at one point – descended to the moon.

Back in the Bronx, the game advanced quietly until those tense moments in the eighth when the Senators put runners on first and second with no outs and Sheppard broke the news about the fate of America’s three astronauts.

Aker had taken the mound for the Yankees in the top of the inning, relieving Hamilton, who struck out five and allowed only a hit in 4 and a third innings.

Both teams’ offenses went out quietly in the ninth. The Senators staged a rally in the 10th, but a double play wasted a lead-off single and Epstein was stranded at second after his ground-rule double.

Aker found himself in a jam in the 11th after giving up a single, a stolen base and a couple of walks – one of those was intentional. However, he induced light contact from Epstein, who smacked a ball back to the mound for 1-3 putout.

Roy White brought the crowd to life in the bottom of the inning with a double to left off of Washington pitcher Casey Cox, who had entered the game in the bottom of the ninth.

Cox intentionally walked Jimmie Hall to set up a double play possibility.

With two hits already, Gene Michael stepped to the plate and smacked a hard grounder that second baseman Tim Cullen dove for and knocked down. The ball squirted about 10 feet away from Cullen, who raced to pick it up. The speedy White was blazing down the third base line when Cullen fired wild and too late to the plate.

White’s run gave the Yankees a 3-2 walk-off win in the bottom of the 11th inning.

When White crossed home, the digital clock on the Yankee Stadium scoreboard read 5:18 p.m.

More than five and half hours after the game had finished, at 10:56:20 p.m., Apollo captain Neil Armstrong took “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind,” he said, as he walked out of the lunar module, made his way down a nine-step ladder and, for the first time in human history, stepped onto the surface of the moon.