I have a very personal connection to Robinson, who achieved a most memorable feat on Mother's Day 1966, when I attended my first baseball game. In the first inning of the second game of that May 8, 1966 doubleheader, Robinson hit a home run out of Memorial Stadium, ripping a Luis Tiant pitch deep down the left field line and into the parking lot, much to the amazement of a partisan crowd that didn't think such a feat possible. We stayed through the nightcap; it may have been a day to celebrate mom, but a kid's first ballgame shouldn't end prematurely. I didn't discover until breakfast the next morning about the out-of-the-park experience, courtesy of dad's retelling of a radio news item. Until the Orioles moved into Camden Yards from Memorial Stadium, a flag simply proclaiming "HERE" was raised at every home game on 33rd Street to mark the occasion. Robinson now owns the pennant. While I was there, I couldn't see the homer, only the curious looks on the faces as necks craned to see how far the blast traveled. My dad had purchased tickets in the upper deck on the third base side, but when we were hiking up the notoriously steep concrete steps to our destination, mom turned to him and shot him a steely glare that said, "I'm not sitting all the way up here." We retreated to the concourse, where we waited while dad exchanged the ducats for seats in the lower reserved section just beyond third base - under cover from the beating sun, but preventing me from tracking the flight of that longball off Robinson's bat. Robinson was noted for many things as an Oriole - clutch hitting, the ability to turn adversity into success and an undeniable passion to win. And winning was something he did frequently as an Oriole. But hitting .300 with 179 homers and 545 RBIs over six seasons will translate into victories. His No. 20 was retired in 1972 and Robinson, now 76, was enshrined in Cooperstown in 1982, the first modern Oriole to gain baseball immortality. And no one that watched him in Memorial Stadium could say he didn't earn the honor. When his bronze likeness in the new picnic area is unveiled Saturday night (the ceremony is slated to begin at 5:15 p.m., but the Orioles are urging fans to arrive early because a large walk-up crowd is expected), recollections of Robinson's impact will flood through the collective memories of O's fans. I've shared my best memory of Robinson. What's yours? Photos used in the Flashback feature come from the Orioles' photo archives. From time to time this season, we'll take a look back at interesting people, places and events in Baltimore baseball history through the camera lenses that captured them and lend a historical perspective to what's shown.