Description: Ticket Stub from Game 1 of the 1965 World Series between the Minnesota Twins and the Los Angeles Dodgers, recently graded PSA 3 (VG-MK). There is writing on the front of the ticket that has the date and score of the game. The holiest of Jewish holy days left a gaping hole in the Los Angeles Dodgers’ rotation at the beginning of the 1965 World Series. But for Sandy Koufax, his faith came before his career. Koufax, the incomparable Dodgers ace, naturally would be expected to start Game 1 against the Minnesota Twins in Bloomington, Minn. But Oct. 6, 1965, the date of Game 1 of the World Series, also happened to be the date of Yom Kippur – the Day of Atonement – on the Jewish calendar. The commissioner’s office determined the World Series dates in a meeting on Sept. 8, when the Dodgers were about to creep back into second place. “From what I’ve been told, there are no dispensations for this particular day,” Koufax told the Associated Press in an article which ran on Oct. 1, when the Dodgers were back in first and locked into a tight pennant race with San Francisco. “But then I haven’t really talked about it to a rabbi. If we sew up the pennant, I plan to take it up and find out the proceedings. If I’m told it isn’t proper to pitch, then I won’t because I wouldn’t feel right about it. “I’m praying for rain Wednesday (Oct. 6). It has to rain. It would solve the whole matter.” Koufax’s boss, Walter O’Malley, put any questions to rest by stating his star southpaw would pitch in Game 2 instead.“I won’t let Sandy pitch on Yom Kippur under any circumstances,” O’Malley told the press. “I can’t let the boy do that to himself.” Yet O’Malley, too, decided to see what the heavens could do to avoid playing Game 1 on Yom Kippur, noting he’d “ask the Pope what he can do about rain on that day.” The weathermen, however, called for favorable conditions that afternoon at Metropolitan Stadium, and Don Drysdale would take the hill for the Dodgers, facing off against Jim “Mudcat” Grant. According to United Press International’s Milton Richman, Koufax made up his mind on choosing religion over the World Series in 1959 when the championship coincided with Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. He did not attend workouts at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, and he did not pitch in Game 4. Koufax summed up his thoughts with Richman, saying that a “man is entitled to his belief and I believe I should not work on Yom Kippur. It’s as simple as all that and I have never had any trouble on that account since I’ve been in baseball.”
Price: 549 USD
Location: West Linn, Oregon
End Time: 2024-11-09T03:17:19.000Z
Shipping Cost: 5.99 USD
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Player: Sandy Koufax
Sport: Baseball
Year: 1965
Original/Reproduction: Original
Grade: VG (MK)
Team: Los Angeles Dodgers
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Team-Baseball: Los Angeles Dodgers
Vintage: Yes
Event/Tournament: 1965 World Series