BLACK IN THE DAY | Jim Rice, Mr. No Time For The BS

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2022
  • You can't talk all-time lethal #MLBbro bats without discussing the dominance of Boston Red Sox slugger #JimRice.
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Комментарии • 84

  • @darrylwillett8359
    @darrylwillett8359 6 месяцев назад +13

    He also helped to save a child's life in 1982.

  • @MrStimpage
    @MrStimpage 4 дня назад

    Thank you! Anytime I can get Rice content, I'm all over it. He was an absolute beast and remains my favourite Red Sox player of all time...

  • @loringjohnson7797
    @loringjohnson7797 2 месяца назад +7

    If not for 2 wrist injuries, dimming eyesight late in his career and the 1981
    players strike, Rice would easily have topped 500 dingers and probably
    would have come close to 2000 RBI's. My favorite player ever.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks for sharing !

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 2 месяца назад

      His knees began to bother him, too, and that cut his power. There were rumors that he might sign with the Blue Jays, but Rice said, "No way. I hate that Astroturf. Besides, there's no way I'm wearing those ugly uniforms!"

  • @jockoadams3377
    @jockoadams3377 27 дней назад +3

    One of my favorite Jim Rice highlights... in 1986 at Yankee Stadium, Rice and Red Sox SS Spike Owen collide with each other (plus the side wall near the stands) going after a fly ball in the corner. Rice made the catch and held on for the out. But a NY fan tried to steal his hat after it fell off. Well Rice went into the stands (again, at Yankee Stadium) and got the Yankee fan to give him his hat back.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  26 дней назад

      Remember that! Was very young. ! Thanks for sharing

  • @jnolette1030
    @jnolette1030 2 месяца назад +5

    I saw Jim Rice play many times at Fenway. I have an autographed picture from him. I can't believe it's been so long

  • @richardsiciliano7117
    @richardsiciliano7117 23 дня назад +5

    He had a rough relationship with the Boston media, he didn't put up with the crap. I think that was one of the reasons it took longer for him to get into the Hall. Race may have been a factor for sure, but you gotta play the game with the media, and Rice wasn't that type of guy, similar to Bonds.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  14 дней назад +2

      Eventually he couldn't be denied, and all is well that ends well. Thanks for the insight !

  • @markoakes8620
    @markoakes8620 4 дня назад

    Thank you. Jim Rice is a Boston legend.

  • @davids8302
    @davids8302 2 месяца назад +5

    I could watch his swings all day long. 💥

  • @drebaselius9160
    @drebaselius9160 20 дней назад +3

    Quick strong hands. A beautiful swing.

  • @brianwaloweek6770
    @brianwaloweek6770 Месяц назад +2

    My dad made his golf clubs at the Top Flite custom shop, he spoke highly of him as a gentleman, he would come in with his buddy , Sox catcher Bob Montgomery . Also made clubs for Dr. J, another favorite of his.

  • @Paul-xm7ot
    @Paul-xm7ot 7 дней назад +1

    Jim Rice. My favorite player growing up. Flick of his wrist and it was gone. Injuries cost him homers later in his career and believe it or not, Fenways wall took away so many homers.

  • @darnellbush2408
    @darnellbush2408 2 месяца назад +4

    Clearly one of the most dangerous hitters ever 💪

  • @user-ll2yj3hy4c
    @user-ll2yj3hy4c 14 дней назад +1

    He was always my favorite player.

  • @jockoadams3377
    @jockoadams3377 27 дней назад +1

    Rice had a potent 10 years of dominance in the MLB. His 1978 campaign he was locked in and put up video game numbers. One of my favorite Red Sox. I had the opportunity to meet him at a corporate event.. he was a very cool, down to earth guy. No ego, but definitely the kind of guy who would still not take any BS.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  26 дней назад

      Thank You for your story about Jim Rice! He was at his peak in '78!

  • @flame-sky7148
    @flame-sky7148 2 месяца назад +5

    Great player, I wish he wasn't injured at the end of that 1975 regular season. He would have been in that epic world series with the Reds.

    • @mysticakhenaton1701
      @mysticakhenaton1701 2 месяца назад +2

      the series was without him, but I get your point.

    • @DavidJackeMeyer
      @DavidJackeMeyer 10 дней назад +1

      Very interesting to know! My Dad loved The Big Red Machine, and we would watch the 1975 World Series over & over again on Laser Disc as I grew up in Indiana in the 80s. I had grown up a fan of both teams (my Mom's father was a Boston fan from Chelmsford), and lucky to see games in both stadiums. But I never knew Jim Rice was injured for that series. Didn't realize he was even in the big league yet... ! JIM RICE, black in the day! Great show!

    • @flame-sky7148
      @flame-sky7148 10 дней назад +1

      @@DavidJackeMeyer Yea he came up the same year Fred Lynn came up and they finished #1 & #2 in Rookie of the Year. Also Fred Lynn would also win MVP that year as a rookie. They almost had similar numbers but Lynn played better defense. Also, in the series they moved Yaz to LF when he had been playing 1B. That lineup was potent even without Rice, and matched the Reds very well.

    • @Olehenry
      @Olehenry 10 дней назад +1

      @@flame-sky7148 So much talent, what a Series!

    • @flame-sky7148
      @flame-sky7148 10 дней назад +1

      @@Olehenry yea it was. Rose and Morgan were so clutch in that game 7. And of course you know Game 6 was The Game of Ages. But what about the 1986 MLB playoffs, incredible.

  •  6 месяцев назад +8

    That long wait for the hall was bull$#@%! What a class act he was BLACK IN THE DAY.

  • @courylanders4142
    @courylanders4142 2 месяца назад +3

    I remember when he hit a foul tip and snapped the bat in half with his hands!! Dude was naturally strong.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  2 месяца назад

      Thanks for sharing that ! Crazy power in his wrists.

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 2 месяца назад +1

      @@mlbbrodotcom8285One day in 1975, Rice wanted to have a quiet workout. But he wasn't getting it. Bernie Carbo and Dwight Evans got into a heated argument that soon became a shouting match. Rice said, "Pipe down, guys." Both of them replied, "Shut up, rookie!" After two minutes of that, Rice had enough. He grabbed Carbo in one hand, Evans in the other (both weighing over 200 lbs.), lifted them both off the ground, smiled and said, "Be quiet." That shut 'em up.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  Месяц назад

      @@davidlafleche1142 great story! Thank you

  • @JohnDoe-qu7gm
    @JohnDoe-qu7gm 22 дня назад +1

    His swing was all upper torso. Dude was a STRONG mother

  • @whip57
    @whip57 Месяц назад

    I was at the Bob Hope Desert Classic in Palm Springs in 78, saw Jim Rice hitting golf balls on the hitting range, was hitting them further than the pro golfers.
    So much power, great hitter, not sure why it took so long for the Hall of Fame, probably thought his career was a bit short at that time.

  • @impassable
    @impassable 2 дня назад

    Saw him in Oakland, he hit two home runs

  • @pointman913
    @pointman913 2 месяца назад +9

    Hardly overlooked

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  2 месяца назад +2

      In the history of the game he's underrated and overlooked. Ask any Gen Z baseball kid if they know who Jim Rice is. Then get back to us. This is why we do it. Thanks for the feeback!

    • @pointman913
      @pointman913 2 месяца назад

      because a generation of people never heard of guy doesnt make him overlooked. I dont know about every ballplayer from the 40's and 50's doesnt mean they're overlooked. Just time going by is all. I wouldnt expect this generation to acknowledge anything in the past. They are so disrespectful to older people these days@@mlbbrodotcom8285

    • @jockoadams3377
      @jockoadams3377 27 дней назад +1

      It took Rice too long to get into the Hall of Fame.

    • @georgelafontaine6045
      @georgelafontaine6045 19 дней назад +1

      @@mlbbrodotcom8285Umm…what? Generational Z doesn’t know who Lou Brock is. WTF does that matter? Gen Z is not as big a baseball generation as previous ones.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  19 дней назад

      @@georgelafontaine6045 Thanks for your comment ! We care and will continue to share the current accomplishments and history of MLBbros. Thats what we do! Thats what baseball is about

  • @grantorino7644
    @grantorino7644 Месяц назад +1

    I got to see that Man hit a golf ball. You wanna talk about impressive!

  • @MrCaptainBlack1
    @MrCaptainBlack1 20 дней назад

    RICE was an awesome player. Pure power. Thankfully he was injured during the 75 WS. If the Sox had played Carbo at 1st base, they may have won. CARBO lit Reds pitching.

  • @rafaelramirez1507
    @rafaelramirez1507 2 месяца назад +7

    Jim Rice was not overlooked, you don't know baseball. He was a Yankee killer back in the day

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  2 месяца назад +2

      We don’t know baseball lol I would hope we do bro the guy who owns it been a Hall of Fame voter since the 80s and much of the staff works directly in the game in some capacity. Maybe you misunderstood the point of the segment. Hes a guy that’s not talked about often and many contemporary fans have no clue about buddy. We are an educational tool of funk and fire. We don’t have to prove we know baseball just watch the videos and listen to
      podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-mlbbro-show-podcast-the-mixtape/id1678996219?i=1000614598472
      And check our socials. Hopefully we change your mind but thanks for commenting.

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 2 месяца назад +2

      @@mlbbrodotcom8285 That's because Jim Rice was a superstar, but oddly, not a glamorous one. He didn't have a huge ego (Ted Williams), a catchy nickname (Bill "Spaceman" Lee) or do anything off-the-wall (Steve "Psycho" Lyons). At his best, his power hitting caused a pitcher to swallow his tobacco and puke on the mound, but he really wasn't a "limelight" guy.

    • @georgelafontaine6045
      @georgelafontaine6045 19 дней назад

      @@mlbbrodotcom8285Founded by a Hall of Fame voter? And? This guy wants to vote Bonds in, yet, does not want Brady to get in because Deflategate. Gee, I wonder why? LOL.

  • @kmac1766
    @kmac1766 12 дней назад

    He in.

  • @MrCaptainBlack1
    @MrCaptainBlack1 20 дней назад +1

    Rice was hurt alot. That is what delayed his HOF entry.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  14 дней назад

      Thanks for your feedback ! He played between 145-163 games eight times in his career

  • @BManolakos
    @BManolakos Месяц назад +1

    I’m not sure I agree with the claim that Rice was “overlooked” during his playing career. He won an MVP the same year Ron Guidry went 25-3 and led his team to a World Series win. When baseball writers give you MVP votes, it’s a strong indication that you’re being recognized for your accomplishments.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  Месяц назад

      Thanks for your feedback! Well. You are a diehard baseball fan it seems. Ask the average fan ages 13-35 and they don't know how good Jim Rice is. Most don't know who he is and that's a shame. We can't assume because WE know that our sons, nephews and neighbors know. So we will celebrate the underrated and understated greats. Please come again.

    • @BManolakos
      @BManolakos Месяц назад

      @@mlbbrodotcom8285I will always wonder whether the Red Sox would have won the 1975 World Series if Rice had been able to play. Considering how close they came to winning without him and what a competitor Rice was, I bet they would have won. And that, in turn, would have changed the way we regard the Reds of the 70s. They would go from the “Big Red Machine” to a team that lost all but one of the championships it played in.

  • @mysticakhenaton1701
    @mysticakhenaton1701 2 месяца назад +1

    👍👍👍👍

  • @emeryhays
    @emeryhays Месяц назад

    I. Remember when his teammate wade boggs.wrote in his book that . Jim rice. Was a Uncle Tom. and thought he was really white. I thought that was very interesting.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  Месяц назад

      Thanks for the feedback. I believe that was more Wade Boggs’ perception of what a Black baseball player should act like more than Jim trying to be white. As a big Black man, Jim knew he had to play it cool in Beantown and also was well spoken and didn’t believe in aligning with any stereotypes.
      Thanks for that story !!

  • @TheLowerNard-sc6rq
    @TheLowerNard-sc6rq 20 дней назад

    Not that Rice isnt a good batter. But Fenway Park is a screwed up field. Left field is only 310 ft deep, but they compensated by making the left field wall 37 ft high. Jim bats lefthanded and hits alot of pop ups. Perfect for HRs

    • @moemadge
      @moemadge 14 дней назад +1

      Pretty sure it’s 320 feet down the left field line at Fenway. Also, Rice batted right. He had many line drives off of the green monster that would have been home runs in most other parks that ended up being only singles at Fenway!

    • @TheLowerNard-sc6rq
      @TheLowerNard-sc6rq 14 дней назад +1

      @@moemadge 310 or 320. I got 2 different sources. But I didnt know he batted right.
      .....No AL player has done it since Rice in 1978, and his total remains the third highest by an AL right-handed hitter, behind DiMaggio and Jimmie Foxx (438 in 1932).. Nice, Rice!

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  14 дней назад

      He hit 208 of his 382 career homers at Fenway. Thats 54 percent which is basically half.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  14 дней назад +1

      Thanks for contributing to the conversation !

    • @TheLowerNard-sc6rq
      @TheLowerNard-sc6rq 14 дней назад

      @@mlbbrodotcom8285 Absolutely. I didn't realize he was that good.

  • @senorpepper3405
    @senorpepper3405 2 месяца назад +2

    I just look at the ball player. No race involved.

  • @wakeup8922
    @wakeup8922 Месяц назад

    Can you do a documentary called “White In The Day” ?

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  Месяц назад +1

      Everyday is "White In The Day" lol in baseball and comprise more than 50 percent of the league. Black In The Day there was close to 30 percent or more Blacks in the league now there's 6 percent, so until the numbers improve, we will continue to highlight the record breakers, movers and shakers Black In The Day and presently in baseball.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks for your feedback !

    • @wakeup8922
      @wakeup8922 Месяц назад

      Ok ….. so maybe you can do a “White In The Day” for the NBA and NFL. After all those leagues are predominantly black and used to be predominantly White.

    • @soxjohn
      @soxjohn 24 дня назад

      What for? White players suffer no shortage of attention in sports history.

    • @DavidJackeMeyer
      @DavidJackeMeyer 10 дней назад

      I'm guessing you'll be increasingly embarrassed by your assertion/comment as you age because you merely detract from the conversation we all want to have. While it's too bad skin colors are front-and-center for our eyes/brains, and even more disappointing that content of character doesn't get raised to the top of one's minds when thinking about and interacting with others, you will eventually appreciate the point of highlighting Black in the Day in the 70s and 80s.
      OTOH, @mlbbrodotcom8285 could take a lesson from detracting statements -- viewers want more details, and better articulated claim, and resourced documentation. It is implied that Jim Rice did not get a fair shake, either in his career or perhaps in his bid & entry into the Hall. But the video does not substatiate this, only hinting at something unfair. Details details details, important for improving the lot of each person (and to help naysayers such as @wakeup8922 to understand where issues may have been or still be present).
      Thanks for your work, yet you can still improve 💪🏽

  • @jamestiscareno4387
    @jamestiscareno4387 Месяц назад +7

    Lots of great players never make it into the Hall Of Fame. Stop trying to make it a race issue.

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  Месяц назад +1

      Race? You clearly missed the boat lol Two he didn’t miss the Hall of Fame so what’s your point?

    • @mlbbrodotcom8285
      @mlbbrodotcom8285  Месяц назад +1

      And LOTS of great players don’t NOT make the Hall of Fame lol but some players that are NOT great do. Let me fix that for you and when you come back please come prepared with you homework or to the principals office you go

    • @MrCaptainBlack1
      @MrCaptainBlack1 20 дней назад +2

      Not about race at all. Just ignorant evaluation.