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Willie Mays
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Willie Mays

Born 1931 · Joined the Ancestors 2024
Fact
660 home runs and 24 All-Star selections
Fact
"The Catch" in the 1954 World Series is the most famous play in baseball
Fact
Considered the greatest all-around player in baseball history

Willie Howard Mays Jr. — the Say Hey Kid — played baseball with a joy and brilliance that transcended statistics, though his numbers were staggering: 660 home runs, 3,283 hits, 338 stolen bases, and a defensive prowess in center field that produced "The Catch" — the over-the-shoulder grab in the 1954 World Series that remains the most famous play in baseball history.

Born in Westfield, Alabama, in 1931, Mays grew up playing in the industrial leagues around Birmingham before joining the Negro League's Birmingham Black Barons at 17. The New York Giants signed him in 1950, and within two years he was the National League Rookie of the Year. His combination of power, speed, defense, and baseball instinct was unlike anything the sport had ever seen — he was the prototype for the modern five-tool player.

Mays played 22 seasons in the major leagues, was named to 24 All-Star teams, and won two MVP awards. But his impact went beyond baseball. He was one of the first Black superstars to be embraced by mainstream America, opening doors while carrying the weight of representation with characteristic grace. He joined the ancestors on June 18, 2024, at 93, and baseball paused to honor the greatest all-around player the game has ever known.

It isn't hard to be good from time to time in sports. What's tough is being good every day.
— Willie Mays
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Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1931
Born May 6 in Westfield, Alabama
1948
Joins the Birmingham Black Barons of the Negro Leagues at 17
1951
Named National League Rookie of the Year with the New York Giants
1954
"The Catch" in the World Series becomes the most famous play in baseball history
1979
Inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame
2015
Receives Presidential Medal of Freedom

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