Ex-outfielder known for 613-foot home run
Neill Sheridan, an outfielder in the old Pacific Coast League who supposedly hit the longest home run in history, died Thursday in Antioch. He was 93.
Mr. Sheridan died peacefully while surrounded by family members a month after suffering from pneumonia, said his granddaughter Tami Hopkins.
In his 12-year career in the 1940s and ’50s, Mr. Sheridan played mostly in the PCL, including several stints with the San Francisco Seals and one with the Oakland Oaks. He also appeared in two games for the 1948 Boston Red Sox.
“Ted Williams and I were talking, and Joe DiMaggio comes out and asks me if I’d like to meet Babe Ruth,” said Mr. Sheridan, reminiscing about a day in spring training for a Chronicle story published in January 2014.
A Sacramento native, Mr. Sheridan grew up in Berkeley, earned a football scholarship to USF and joined the Seals in 1943, playing for legendary manager Lefty O’Doul, whom Mr. Sheridan called “Mr. San Francisco.”
His best season was 1947, when he hit .286 with 16 homers and 95 RBIs, and he was with the Red Sox the following season. Pinch-hitting in the ninth inning during a 6-2 loss to the Yankees, Mr. Sheridan struck out looking, his only major-league at-bat.
“Regrets? No. Quite a thrill, really,” he said of his short big-league experience.
In 1953, while playing for the Sacramento Solons, Mr. Sheridan hit a ball 613.8 feet, as legend has it, considered the longest homer in history at the time.
According to accounts in the Sacramento Bee and Sacramento Union, a man said he had found the ball in the back seat of his car with the rear window smashed. A parking lot employee claimed to have heard glass break at the time of the homer.
The Solons measured the distance at 620 feet and hired a local surveying company for a more precise reading: 613.8 feet.
Mr. Sheridan’s career ended a year later. He worked at an Orinda grocery store and Pleasant Hill liquor store and lived with his wife, Irene, in Pleasant Hill for more than 60 years.
“He was so humble,” Hopkins said. “He met Joe DiMaggio and so many great ballplayers, but wouldn’t go around saying who he was. Two days ago, he got fan mail.”
Mr. Sheridan is survived by his wife, one child, three granddaughters and five great-grandchildren. A service will be at Christ the King Church in Pleasant Hill on Nov. 14.