Next
 up in my “Turn Back the Clock” sub-set series is former slugger (and 
another fellow Brooklyn native) Rocky Colavito, who slammed four home 
runs on June 10th against the Baltimore Orioles:
Leading the Indians to an 11-8 win, all Colavito did that day was go 4-4
 with four round-trippers, driving in six runs while scoring five 
himself.
The game would help him take the home run title that season, hitting 42 
of them while driving in 111 runs after hitting 41 the previous year.
It’s easy to forget after all these years that Colavito was one of the 
top all-time home run hitters when he retired after the 1968 season, 
swatting 374 of them along with 1159 RBI’s and 971 runs scored.
Ironically, right after he led the American League in homers in 1959 he 
was traded to the Detroit Tigers for batting champ Harvey Kuenn on April
 17th of 1960, the only time a batting champ was traded for a home run 
champ.
He would not disappoint the Detroit fans, averaging just under 35 home 
runs during his four years in the “Motor City”, including a career high 
of 45 during the homer-crazy 1961 season.
