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Related: About this forumFrank Howard, the Washington Senators' 'Capital Punisher,' dies at 87
Frank Howard, the Washington Senators Capital Punisher, dies at 87One of baseballs most feared hitters, the gigantic slugger belted the final home run for the old Washington Senators in 1971
By Matt Schudel
October 30, 2023 at 5:01 p.m. EDT
Frank Howard of the Washington Senators working out before a game on May 18, 1968. Mr. Howard homered twice that day against the Detroit Tigers, the last of a six-game stretch in which he hit an astonishing 10 home runs. (AP)
When Major League Baseball returned to Washington in 2005, the Nationals played their games at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium. It had been 34 years since the city had a baseball team, but the stadium still held remnants of its last star before the game went away. Deep in the upper deck, several seats were painted white, marking the longest home runs hit by Frank Howard, who during his seven seasons with the woeful Washington Senators was recognized as one of baseballs strongest and most feared hitters.
At 6-foot-7 and about 270 pounds, he was a towering force on an otherwise forgettable team, launching monumental home runs that sometimes flew more than 500 feet.
When the Nationals arrived in RFK Stadium more than three decades after Mr. Howards final game, players looked at the distant white seats in the upper deck and could not believe a baseball could be hit that far. Theyd ask me, Where was home plate back then? Washington Post sports columnist Thomas Boswell wrote in a 2016 online chat. Id say, Right where it is now, give or take a foot or two. Not one player ever believed me. They considered it impossible.
Mr. Howard, who twice led the American League in home runs and remained an enduring favorite of Washingtons disenfranchised baseball fans, died Oct. 30 at a hospital in Aldie, Va. He was 87.
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Frank Howard, the Washington Senators' 'Capital Punisher,' dies at 87 (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Oct 2023
OP
chicoescuela
(1,544 posts)1. Damn and with his former team in the World Series. Never saw him play
in person but did see some TV games. There werent many games on TV back in the day.
BeyondGeography
(40,003 posts)2. Saw him live in NY in the 60s
A very intimidating sight with a bat in his hands. Even from the upper deck he looked like a mountain. The 3rd baseman would stand at the edge of the outfield grass and the 3rd base coach would be closer to the dugout than the field.