# AC370 - 09/08/1998, USA, Mark McGwire hits Home Run #62, breaking Roger Maris's Single Season Record
Own a Cover Commemorating Mark McGwire’s Record-Breaking Home Run
During the summer of 1998, a mix of talent and nostalgia rekindled America’s interest in baseball. That summer, Seattle Mariner Ken Griffey Jr., Chicago Cub Sammy Sosa, and St. Louis Cardinal Mark McGwire chased Roger Maris’ 37-year-old record of 61 home runs in one season.
By September, it appeared McGwire was on track to break this most revered of baseball records. Fans pulled for the humble McGwire, who as a boy hit a home run in his very first trip to the plate during a little league game. Crowds went wild each time “Big Mac” knocked a pitch out of the ballpark with his powerful swing.
Steve Trachsel was pitching for the Chicago Cubs during the game on Tuesday, September 8. McGwire stepped up to the plate with no runners on base in the fourth inning. He hit Trachsel’s first pitch, an 88-mile-an-hour sinking fastball, so low toward left field that it appeared it would stay in the park. Instead, the ball cleared the wall by about five feet, ricocheting off an advertising sign. Maris’ children were a few of the first people who congratulated the new home run king.
This is your chance to add a piece of baseball history to your collection with a special event cover honoring McGwire’s historic achievement. It features the 1969 Professional Baseball stamp and 1991 Cardinal stamp canceled in St. Louis on the day McGwire broke the record. Get it for your collection now.
Own a Cover Commemorating Mark McGwire’s Record-Breaking Home Run
During the summer of 1998, a mix of talent and nostalgia rekindled America’s interest in baseball. That summer, Seattle Mariner Ken Griffey Jr., Chicago Cub Sammy Sosa, and St. Louis Cardinal Mark McGwire chased Roger Maris’ 37-year-old record of 61 home runs in one season.
By September, it appeared McGwire was on track to break this most revered of baseball records. Fans pulled for the humble McGwire, who as a boy hit a home run in his very first trip to the plate during a little league game. Crowds went wild each time “Big Mac” knocked a pitch out of the ballpark with his powerful swing.
Steve Trachsel was pitching for the Chicago Cubs during the game on Tuesday, September 8. McGwire stepped up to the plate with no runners on base in the fourth inning. He hit Trachsel’s first pitch, an 88-mile-an-hour sinking fastball, so low toward left field that it appeared it would stay in the park. Instead, the ball cleared the wall by about five feet, ricocheting off an advertising sign. Maris’ children were a few of the first people who congratulated the new home run king.
This is your chance to add a piece of baseball history to your collection with a special event cover honoring McGwire’s historic achievement. It features the 1969 Professional Baseball stamp and 1991 Cardinal stamp canceled in St. Louis on the day McGwire broke the record. Get it for your collection now.