Willie Mays honored at Oakland Coliseum — site of last hit

OAKLAND — Players respectfully hustled out of the Oakland Coliseum dugouts, doffed their caps, and stoically joined a moment of silence Tuesday night for fallen baseball legend Willie Mays.

It was here, in this decaying stadium soon to be abandoned by the Athletics, that Mays delivered his last hit and finished patrolling centerfield in an unparalleled Hall of Fame career.

In Game 2 of the 1973 World Series, a 42-year-old Mays delivered a go-ahead RBI single up the middle off Rollie Fingers in the 12th inning, helping the New York Mets win 10-7 before a crowd of 49,151.

Tuesday night, only a couple thousand fans were scattered across the Coliseum’s lower two levels as the A’s opened their seventh-to-last homestand in Oakland, ahead of their eventual move to Las Vegas and three-year layover in Sacramento.

But a hush quickly engulfed the mostly empty stadium at twilight, as an image of “Willie Mays, 1931-2024” appeared on the blackened videoboards above the foul posts. Some 40 minutes earlier, Mays’ death (at age 93) was announced by the San Francisco Giants, the major-league organization he broke in with in New York in 1951, and for whom he brilliantly shined until a 1972 trade to the Mets.

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