The story of Babe Ruth's "called shot"—one of the most legendary and debated moments in baseball history—took place during Game 3 of the 1932 World Series between the New York Yankees and the Chicago Cubs, on October 1, 1932, at Wrigley Field.
🧢 The Scene:
The Yankees and Cubs were tied 4–4 in the 5th inning.
Ruth was at bat, facing Cubs pitcher Charlie Root.
The crowd and Cubs players were heckling Ruth, and the tension was high.
📍 What Happened:
As Ruth stood at the plate with a two-strike count, he made a gesture—pointing toward center field.
On the very next pitch, he crushed a home run over the center-field fence, estimated at over 440 feet.
⚾ The Legend:
Many believe Ruth was calling his shot, signaling he would hit a home run to center field—and then doing exactly that.
Lou Gehrig, who batted next and also homered, later claimed Ruth indeed called it.
The Yankees went on to win the game and sweep the Series.
🤔 The Debate:
No definitive video proves exactly where Ruth pointed. Some say he was gesturing at the pitcher or the Cubs dugout, not calling his shot.
Baseball historians and fans have debated for decades whether he truly predicted the homer.