Friday, August 23, 1957
No recap of the Little League post-season of 1957 would be complete without the telling of what is perhaps the greatest Cinderella story in youth baseball history: the improbable and unstoppable march to Williamsport of a scruffy bunch of upstart Mexican pee-wees which culminated in the historic perfecto pitched by their ambidextrous ace in the final game of the Little League World Series.
The team blanked by Monterrey Industrial 60 years ago today was La Mesa, California: the champs of the same State Tournament in which West Covina won Third Place less than two weeks before.
My mother was so thorough in her scrapbooking that she actually subscribed to the Williamsport newspaper so she could also document the Little League World Series that year. The following are selections from her many pages of clippings.
By all accounts, the pint-sized niƱos from Mexico were celebrated fan-favorites, contradicting the political narrative in the 2006 film The Perfect Game, which portrayed the team as a target of xenophobia and racism throughout their tournament play. It was simply not true. (I don't care how good a team is from a technical point-of-view: you can't win 13 games in a row in any sport if the crowd is constantly hostile towards you.)
Click on the jump for more articles and photos!