Los Angeles Times

First DH at-bat was walk in park

- By John Scheibe

When Ron Blomberg of the New York Yankees stepped into the batter’s box on this date in 1973 at Fenway Park in Boston, he made baseball history, and he didn’t have to hit, catch or throw the ball.

Blomberg was the American League’s first designated hitter and in that first at-bat he drew a basesloade­d walk against Luis Tiant. For the game, he had a hit and an RBI in three atbats. Orlando Cepeda was the DH for Boston and although the Red Sox won 15-5, Cepeda drew a blank, going 0 for 6.

In games involving local teams that were canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Clippers were scheduled to play the Chicago Bulls at Staples Center on Monday. The Bulls had won on Dec. 14 in Chicago, 109-106.

In baseball, the Dodgers were to open a four-game series in St. Louis against the Cardinals, and the Angels and Oakland Athletics were set to play the first of three at Angel Stadium.

Here is a look at memorable games and outstandin­g sports performanc­es on this date:

1896 — The first modern Olympic Games open in Athens, and on the first day American James B. Connelly of South Boston wins the triple jump, known then as the hop, step and jump, to become the Games’ first gold medalist.

1947 — Jimmy Demaret wins the Masters for the second time, finishing two strokes ahead of Byron Nelson and amateur Frank Stranahan. The affable Texan puts himself in the Masters record book by being the first player to shoot all four rounds under par.

1987 — Sugar Ray Leonard returns to boxing after a three-year layoff because of a detached retina and upsets Marvelous Marvin Hagler in a 12-round split decision at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas. Leonard moves up two weight classes to challenge Hagler for the middleweig­ht title, and becomes the ring’s 10th triple champion.

2008 — Lorena Ochoa continues her dominance of women’s golf with a five-shot victory in the Kraft Nabisco Championsh­ip at Rancho Mirage, her second major title. She is the first to win consecutiv­e LPGA majors since Annika Sorenstam in 2005. Ochoa’s first came at the 2007 British Open.

2008 — Graham Rahal, in his first IndyCar start, holds off veteran Helio Castroneve­s at the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg to become the youngest winner in major open-wheel racing at 19 years, 93 days old.

2010 — New Jersey’s Martin Brodeur gets his 600th career win with his second straight shutout in a 3-0 blanking of the Atlanta Thrashers. In his last four games, including this one, Brodeur faces 105 shots and allows only two goals.

2010 — Maya Moore scores 23 points to help Connecticu­t rally from a poor first half and beat Stanford 53-47 for its seventh national title and second straight undefeated season.

2015 — Duke’s talented freshmen — Tyus Jones, Grayson Allen and Jahlil Okafor — turn a nine-point deficit into an eight-point lead with 1:22 left to eke out a 68-63 win over Wisconsin, and its fifth national title.

2017 — Charley Hoffman finishes with the largest first-round lead at Augusta National in 62 years by shooting a seven-under-par 65 for a four-shot lead. It’s the largest since 1955, when Jack Burke Jr. opened with 67 and was four shots ahead of Julius Boros and Mike Souchak.

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