Chris Chambliss 1976 - ALCS Gm. 5 Walk-Off Called by Phil Rizzuto, WPIX-TV, 10/14/1976

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2013
  • Yes We Did!! YanksAtShea presents THE Greatest Moment in Yankees Post-Mantle Era History: Chris Chambliss Walk-Off Home Run in Game 5 of the 1976 ALCS at Yankee Stadium. This is the homer that buried forever the media-generated "NY is a National League Town" propaganda. This is the great home run that officially made NYC a YANKEES-town. Phil Rizzuto's call over WPIX Channel 11 is a peach (far more through and genuine that ABC's w/Cosell). We also salute the late WPIX cameraman Dulio Constable for his superb shot of the home run. God bless Chris Chambliss. God bless George Steinbrenner for bringing the pennant back to Yankees and their fans-watch them POUR on to the field in celebration!
  • СпортСпорт

Комментарии • 799

  • @tonyrusso2989
    @tonyrusso2989 9 лет назад +323

    Rizzuto's call made the win 10 times better..If you grew up listening to him and White, you will understand..

    • @nefty73
      @nefty73 9 лет назад +22

      Tony Russo I couldn't agree more. Nobody called games like Scooter did. He's missed big time.

    • @thetrozzoshow
      @thetrozzoshow 9 лет назад +7

      nefty73 They were still a year away from dominance. No one was beating the Reds that year. They were way too strong. And remember, the Yankees didn't get Reggie until the next year.

    • @huskyjerk
      @huskyjerk 9 лет назад +8

      Tony Russo Yes, Scooter and White are great. I'm a Yankee fan stuck out here in the Midwest, so I never got to hear them, but these videos are music to my ears.

    • @willmack5909
      @willmack5909 8 лет назад +19

      +Tony Russo And indeed I did, The Scooter, Bill White & Frank Messer, WPIX, 11 Alive. 1977 was a fond year for me too as it was the only time I got to watch the Yankees win the World Series with my Dad, who passed away in July 1978. When Bucky Dent hit the HR in that October '78 playoff game vs. the Red Sox, I knew without the shadow of any doubt that my Dad was in Heaven.

    • @tonyrusso2989
      @tonyrusso2989 8 лет назад +14

      Love Reggie but without Munson, they do not win. He got at least one or more hits in 111 out of 149 games in 77. 77, 78 post season, Munson out hit Reggie by one., and batted well over .300. His playoff numbers are awesome. Career .373 hitter in W.S...22 RBI IN 30 GMS. He had at least one or more hits in 28 of 30 gamesOver a 150 game season, that comes out to 111 RBI's., and 230 hits., and don't forget that's POST SEASON. Mr clutch.

  • @marcosc7375
    @marcosc7375 2 года назад +19

    I miss Phil Rizzuto. A great human being and made this game even more exciting.

    • @red2977
      @red2977 2 месяца назад

      I miss him too

  • @johnshipe7045
    @johnshipe7045 6 лет назад +34

    I was a 12-year old boy -- rabid KC Royal fan all my life. This hurt. I cried. But, over time, I studied Chambliss's career -- what an underrated clutch player he was. Respect.

    • @magichendrix
      @magichendrix 7 месяцев назад

      Your Royals got us back in 1980.

    • @johnjordan3314
      @johnjordan3314 7 месяцев назад

      Btw - Cowens was safe at 2nd at the top of the 9th. If that was called correctly. Brett would have come to bat.

    • @Classicrocker6119
      @Classicrocker6119 7 месяцев назад

      I totally understand your thoughts here. We all have our favourite teams we cheer for. But at the end of the day we respect other franchises and their players because we “love” baseball!

    • @bowlersinger
      @bowlersinger 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@johnjordan3314 I think Cowens was out by a hair. Nettles made a great play fielding Wohlford's grounder and throwing to second, all in one smooth motion.

  • @willdrucker4291
    @willdrucker4291 8 лет назад +63

    One of the greatest moments in Yankee history...but what makes it even more special.....the broadcast on the Yankees longtime station WPIX TV and who better to make the classic call than the legend himself, the "Scooter" Phil Rizzuto!!!!

  • @BobPagani
    @BobPagani 8 лет назад +211

    I'm in this video. I was a security guard for the Yankees during the 70s, working at the home dugout. You can see me just before the end of the video getting Chambliss off the field. Several minutes later in the clubhouse Graig Nettles told Chris that he had to go back out to touch home plate; Howard Cosell was saying on ABC that it wasn't an official home run because Chris hadn't touched the plate. Chambliss grabbed me and a couple of my co-workers. We formed a human chain and plowed our way through the mob still on the field. Chambliss stamped his foot on the plate and we ran back as fast as we could. I've been looking for the video of that part for years. I know it exists because I saw it in the 80s but I haven't been able to find it anywhere.

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 8 лет назад +1

      +BobPagani Lucky you. Were you scared?

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 8 лет назад +1

      +BobPagani Is that you at 4.06, 4.07 of this clip?

    • @Slipknot5301
      @Slipknot5301 7 лет назад +6

      you're a bullshit liar, the plate was gone by the time chambliss went back out

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 7 лет назад +4

      It was. But he walked back out and touched the area where home plate had been. Several teammates told him he should go back out.

    • @davidgreene2505
      @davidgreene2505 7 лет назад +2

      naturalselector85 Chambliss did come back out with security

  • @JosephDungee
    @JosephDungee 4 года назад +9

    I was watching on WPIX-11 New York in 1976.. Amazing!!

  • @dwainstanley1670
    @dwainstanley1670 8 лет назад +108

    This scene shows how much the world has changed in almost 40 years

    • @tony195869
      @tony195869 8 лет назад +6

      Dwain Stanley im the guy that tried to steal Chambliss helmet . but was pushed from behind so it looked like I tried to scratch his eyes out ...I am now 60 years old .. and I was part of history . I wish I could apologize to him ... all my friends were beaten up by the blacks 4 hours later in harlem .. I found out were not so tough after all . we were just too slow and were out athletic by the superior race that night ( the African americans ) we got nailed .. we were just too slow

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 8 лет назад +16

      tony195869 So that's you behind Chris at about 00.24 or 00.25 seconds of this clip? What were you doing in Harlem? Were you taking the train home? Even back then, white people knew not to spend too much if any time in Harlem at night. If you were at a bar, you'd have been better off going downtown into the 80th-90th street area. The superior race? There is no superior race.

    • @MrBCurtis
      @MrBCurtis 6 лет назад +2

      Dwain Stanley Absolutely

    • @qdog568
      @qdog568 6 лет назад +14

      tony195869 Yeah, and I'm the guy who hit the homerun.

    • @Tony-hz8ld
      @Tony-hz8ld 5 лет назад +15

      It was a game back then. No advertising messes all over the walls. Big ballparks. Death valley was 436 feet. Pitchers pitched without pitch counts. Less commercials. Only one team can make the playoffs in your division, the best team . Now you have 5 teams instead of 2 teams making playoffs. Breaking up double plays. Catchers blocking the plate. No BS replays. Real announcers like Phil, Bill, and Frank. ETC., ETC., ETC. Today it's a greedy circus.

  • @Tony-hz8ld
    @Tony-hz8ld 5 лет назад +10

    I watch old Yankee games on RUclips just to hear Phil, Bill, and Frank. Especially The Scooter.

  • @DanielHennessy111
    @DanielHennessy111 2 года назад +5

    "The safest place to be is up here in the booth." Love Rizzuto...

  • @joshs4594
    @joshs4594 6 лет назад +32

    One of the best calls ever. Phil Rizzuto was one of a kind.

    • @kimkelly5512
      @kimkelly5512 9 месяцев назад

      How about when he called Roger Maris's home run. Phil was great.

  • @tubularbill
    @tubularbill 7 лет назад +6

    That was the homerun that brought the Yankees back from a 12 year draught. I remember this very well on WPIX.

  • @waltonwarrior7428
    @waltonwarrior7428 10 месяцев назад +3

    This video brings back great memories. Hard to believe it’s been 47 years and I was 24 years old. Where has the time gone?

  • @synthman2000
    @synthman2000 6 лет назад +21

    The voice of my childhood. Best call and followup you'll ever get in baseball. Scooter!

  • @robertritter292
    @robertritter292 Год назад +2

    I was there 46 years ago tonight, greatest moment of my sports viewing life from a $7 upper deck box seat! Didn’t try to go on the field, but stayed over an hour to savor the madness and watch locker room interviews.

  • @FREDDIEHUBBARDMUSIC
    @FREDDIEHUBBARDMUSIC 2 года назад +2

    I grew up listening to rizzuto, Bill White ect. Great Times

  • @Chilltownify
    @Chilltownify 5 лет назад +9

    My first baseball memory and I was hooked from then on out

    • @stan1418
      @stan1418 3 года назад

      Same here, my friend. 8 years old - remember it well

    • @stephencaruso212
      @stephencaruso212 Год назад +1

      Me, too!

  • @frankjimenez4593
    @frankjimenez4593 4 года назад +2

    I was at the game with my family and my friend victor Garay. I was 13 years old at the time.what a time to be alive, I get emotional everytime I watch it. My father has since passed.thank you 👨 dad.ilove you so much

  • @electrolytics
    @electrolytics 2 года назад +3

    Mid 70s through the 80s listened to Phil Rizzuto on the radio for just about every Yankees game. Or on TV sometimes. I was a kid and it was ALWAYS on the radio, at the house. In the garage. In the car. The backyard.
    Upstate NY, old school parents who felt it was duty to have a Yankees broadcast on somehow if the Yanks were playing.

  • @nahpoli
    @nahpoli 7 лет назад +6

    Red Sox fan but I really loved listening to Phil Rizzuto call a game RIP!

  • @synthman2000
    @synthman2000 5 лет назад +15

    Thank you Chris Chambliss. And thank you Scooter. My favorite baseball memory.

  • @ECO473
    @ECO473 4 года назад +13

    My first Yankee World Series...this still brings tears to my eyes 43 years later!!!

  • @matt8863
    @matt8863 7 лет назад +3

    I was 13 years old watching this live on our 13 inch black and white TV.

  • @joshs4594
    @joshs4594 6 лет назад +10

    Holy cow, even as a lifetime Mets fan I still loved The Scooter. He brought honest excitement to his broadcasts.

  • @unfreeze18
    @unfreeze18 6 лет назад +5

    I was up watching that, I was 13 and my life was in front of me, I'm retired now and watching the paint dry, thanks for the memory

  • @iamTW64
    @iamTW64 10 лет назад +36

    I was 12-years old, sitting at home in Kansas City in front of the TV when this happened. It's the only time I've ever shed tears over a baseball game.

    • @TheJonjayhawk
      @TheJonjayhawk 10 лет назад +8

      I was 8 living in Kc watching this game, after Brett tied it with a 3 run home run it was really heartbreaking. I too cried, the only tears I shed over a baseball game.

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 9 лет назад +2

      TheJonjayhawk I can certainly understand why you shed tears. To lose like this is shocking and impossible to prepare for.

    • @kscott24
      @kscott24 9 лет назад +2

      I was 9 when Chambliss hit that homerun; I also cried after that game. It's the only time I can remember crying over a baseball game. Nine years later, the Royals finally won it all, beating the Cardinals in 7.

    • @johnmcconnell4206
      @johnmcconnell4206 9 лет назад +4

      I was 11 sitting at home in KC, also my only tears for a baseball game. It prepared me well for 1977 and 1978 though.

    • @johnBseals
      @johnBseals 9 лет назад +2

      Ugh. What a killer moment. I hated Chambliss for years because of this!

  • @BA3676
    @BA3676 Год назад +6

    I remember staying up to see “Pudge” Fisk’s home run off the foul pole at 12:34 am. This home run was even more historic

    • @johnsain
      @johnsain Год назад

      yes they overhyped that for decades......but Boston had no other joys in postseason in those days....

  • @TR-vr5pz
    @TR-vr5pz 5 лет назад +8

    Rizzuto was the best..loved how he always called his broadcast partners by their last names...always found that interestingly funny

  • @NYC1370
    @NYC1370 7 лет назад +9

    that was an iconic moment seen so many photos of chambliss hitting that homerun takes me back in time love it!!!

  • @terrinceautry
    @terrinceautry 2 года назад +1

    I'll never, ever forget it. I was 10 years old. RIP Scooter.

  • @atiboyful
    @atiboyful 9 лет назад +16

    I watched this on WPIX as a New Jersey Yankees 15 yr old fan. I am surprised he even made it to home plate but he did eventually!

    • @kvernon1
      @kvernon1 9 лет назад +7

      Actually, he didn't...according to Chambliss, by the time he got around the bases, home plate was missing -- it was grabbed by a fan! He stepped on the ground in the place the plate *used* to be, and the umpire acknowledged it. What else was he supposed to do under these circumstances?

    • @VincentTapia
      @VincentTapia Год назад +2

      The umpire did tell Chambless in light of the pandemonium that erupted, he didn’t have to touch home plate but was glad he obliged.

  • @NickName-qh9dz
    @NickName-qh9dz 4 года назад +5

    I remember watching this as a kid. One of the most dramatic moments I've ever seen in Yankee folklore.

  • @jimmyoconnor1
    @jimmyoconnor1 10 лет назад +8

    Best earliest baseball memory... love Scooters call! Cosell's was his usual shouting over people.

  • @iamtman1
    @iamtman1 10 лет назад +8

    Still my favorite all time homer!

  • @44yesmet
    @44yesmet 10 лет назад +4

    I remember this like it was yesterday...Chambliss was one of best hitters in the clutch, sweet memories.

  • @mohammedcohen
    @mohammedcohen 2 года назад +2

    R I P Phil Rizzuto...when I was a young boy YOU were the voice of the Yankees...I used'ta listen to Meatloaf's 'Paradise by the Dashboard Lights' in the winter to get my fix of Yankee's baseball

    • @melcardonell759
      @melcardonell759 2 года назад

      I always fantasized that in the paradise by the das hboard light song Rizzutosplay

    • @melcardonell759
      @melcardonell759 2 года назад

      Sorry in that song I always fantasized that Scooter was describing Mick the Quick Rivers as the base runner

    • @robbarbieri8676
      @robbarbieri8676 10 месяцев назад

      @@melcardonell759 Scooter was angry witt Meat Loaf because he had no idea what the subject of the song was, he just recorded the script they gave him. I believe he called the song pornography. As a Yankee fan, I loved hearing Scooter's voice, but I came to realize "Man, that has got to be the slowest suicide squeeze in history" lol.

  • @mpgundercover8075
    @mpgundercover8075 4 года назад +3

    I was 11 years old when I watched this game live on TV, and Phil Rizzuto's "That ball is outta hear. The Yankees win the pennant!", and seeing that ball up in the air has stuck with me ever since. This was truly a game for the books. It was both emotional and exciting for me to see and hear this game-ending excitement again, almost 40 years later. I also find it quite coincidental that the final score was 7-6, and the year was '76.

  • @billysheppard6091
    @billysheppard6091 Год назад +1

    I will never forget this.. spirit of 76... Go Yankees

  • @responare
    @responare 10 лет назад +3

    one of the greatest moments of my 12 yr old life at the time....nothing else mattered but baseball.

  • @voodoochef100
    @voodoochef100 10 лет назад +3

    THANKS!!! I'll never forget me screaming "THE YANKEES WIN THE PENNANT!!! THE YANKEES WIN THE PENNANT!!!" over and over, until I lost my voice when I was a kid. It was my 1st time seeing Yanks in World Series. Damn what a shame that greed of players & owners killed this once great game.

  • @markportier5466
    @markportier5466 2 года назад +3

    Did you ever notice that back in the 1970s, whenever someone hit an iconic home run (Hank Aaron's record breaker, Carlton Fisk's World Series walk-off, and this one, among others), the first people to congratulate the home run hitter were often a couple of random long-haired hippie dudes from the stands? Good times.

    • @NJGuy1973
      @NJGuy1973 3 месяца назад

      Sometimes you'd get a streaker. And people would be toking in the bleachers, you'd get a contact high. And you'd take a subway to get there and it'd be covered in graffiti and you'd walk by garbage piled up on the curb and porn theaters.
      I miss those days.

  • @spryfolII
    @spryfolII 5 лет назад +6

    This has to be the "Signature" moment in Yankees history. I know all about the storied history of The New York Yankees. I'm a Oriole fan my whole life. I was 8 when this happened. Was supposed to going to bed, I put a towel under the door. I had gotten yelled at just a few minutes prior when Brett hit the 3 run shot all the way up in the upper deck in right. A "Titanic" blast. I yelled YEAAAAH! Then..oooops! Warning 1. Take your little ass to bed....NOW! Then at 11:43pm on the first pitch if the bottom of the 9th.....POW! Over...just like that! I still don't know what I yelled, but I yelled some more after because I was in serious trouble. I didn't mind though. Even though I hated and I mean hated t h e Yankees, I knew...just knew at that moment why one would feel some kinda way about a team. It was because they were from New York and New York meant winning and winning with style, substance....winning with the unexpected and when it absolutely had to get done. New York winning meant breaking your favorite teams back, just when you thought you had 'em. It meant winning when you're supposed to and when.....you're supposed to because even though everyone else thinks your gonna lose, New Yorkers expect to win...EVERY TIME!
    I figured it out, right then, in that moment. I still hate the Yankees, as much as any team in sports because of that. All those things described. Its New York and it had been 13 (imagine that) long embarrassing years of bad Yankees baseball and in 1976 we almost made a HUGE mistake in calling the 1976 New York Yankees a "underdog"! 20 years later the 1996 Yankees would be that underdog, but....its still New York and its Yankee baseball, and the Yankees are never a underdog.
    Even though the Yankees got swept by The Big Red Machine, with one mighty swing, the Yankees put baseball on notice....WE'RE BACK!
    Everytime I see that highlight, I remember. That was the first time in my life I had a moment of clarity, and it was absolutely special.

  • @epaddon
    @epaddon 10 лет назад +3

    THANK YOU for giving us this. For years the only version of this game that is seen in replays or retrospectives is the ABC broadcast and for this moment, Rizzuto and WPIX blew them away completely with (1) a better camera angle as ABC was using the high angle one above home plate and also missed that great isolated shot of Chambliss celebrating and (2) Rizzuto's call which is better than motormouth Howard stepping on Keith Jackson. A priceless treasure!

  • @mikegilbert2500
    @mikegilbert2500 10 лет назад +22

    Wow, I have never seen this version, only the one stated here a couple times of Howard sucking all air from the booth. Holy Cow, even this Red Sox fan can appreciate this excitement

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 10 лет назад +3

      Most teams have never had a moment like this; a walk off home run to win the pennant on the first pitch of the inning. We Yankee fans are lucky to have had two, the second versus Boson in 2003. But in my mind this is the most dramatic and greatest moment in the Yanks' last 50 years.

    • @ernestodelaserna9494
      @ernestodelaserna9494 2 года назад

      Yeah, Cosell pretty much ruined the 70s and part of the 80s sporting events. Except for the "Battle of the Network Stars" and interviewing Ali.

  • @synthman2000
    @synthman2000 6 лет назад +4

    Phil is legend. My childhood Yankee voice.

  • @nicholasantonicello6903
    @nicholasantonicello6903 4 года назад +2

    I was there with two great friends. Upper left field. I'll never forget that moment.

  • @extremeredtv5728
    @extremeredtv5728 10 лет назад +3

    Thank you very much for posting this!! I'm 31 years old and I wish I can have seen it or been there to see it live. Keep up the good work.

  • @truthbtold7997
    @truthbtold7997 3 года назад +2

    Phill Rizzuto is one of the greatest May he Rip

  • @frankjanosko9083
    @frankjanosko9083 5 лет назад +1

    I showed this to one of my employees who is in his 20s. He was amazed that the fans were on the field. It wasn't till he said that that I realized that doesn't happen anymore.

  • @BBQFanNo1
    @BBQFanNo1 8 лет назад +1

    12 long years. The next year will even be much better too.

  • @mikeym1479
    @mikeym1479 3 года назад +3

    Golden age of the Yanks

  • @DMR4736
    @DMR4736 9 лет назад +7

    i hadn't heard Phil get that excited on a home run call; maybe when Maris hit 61 last day of the season in 61

  • @CP5699
    @CP5699 Год назад +15

    Rest in peace, pitcher Mark Littell who passed away on Monday, September 5.

    • @prisoner_of_hope8386
      @prisoner_of_hope8386 Год назад +3

      May he Rest In Peace.

    • @kevinmadden1645
      @kevinmadden1645 10 месяцев назад

      Rest in peace . The irony is that Littlell had a good regular season in 1976 .

  • @TheBatugan77
    @TheBatugan77 5 лет назад +4

    My favorite part was when Chris Chambliss gave that fan the forearm shiver. Planted him!

  • @johnsain
    @johnsain 9 лет назад +3

    AMAZING MOMENT!!!! - saw it live on TV.

  • @DGolus
    @DGolus 8 лет назад +15

    In the fall of 1972, my first semester of college, I met a guy who told us the Yankees wouldn't win the AL Pennant until 1976. He said the vision came to him while watching the 1967 Cardinals/Red Sox World Series. He saw the NY Daily News, with the date October 14, 1976, and front page headline "Yanks Win Pennant - First Time Since '64". He told us "Its a future event that's already happened. Time just has to catch up to it".When he received his vision, there were no East-West divisions yet, so we asked him what if NYY wins the AL East, but loses the AL Pennant. Does his prediction still come true? He said "Pennant" means pennant/AL champion, not division. So, they had to win it all (the AL Championship.) He was worried in 1974 when NYY was a game behind the Orioles with a week to go, but the Orioles held on to win the division.When KC's George Brett's 3-run HR tied the game in the 8th inning, I was worried about my friend's prediction. The next inning, Chris Chambliss made it come true!(My friend was now graduated, at home, sweating this game out. Today, he says I'm one of the few who still remember his prediction BEFORE the event came true.) It was a fantastic prediction!

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 7 лет назад +1

      Is this true? I want to believe you.

    • @cityofpalms
      @cityofpalms 5 лет назад

      The same guy told me I would win the Lotto last Saturday.

    • @bigpapasmurfz5352
      @bigpapasmurfz5352 5 лет назад +1

      @@cityofpalms Did ya win?

  • @petervandenbroeck4183
    @petervandenbroeck4183 2 года назад +4

    Still the best moment for me as a Yankee fan in the 70's. Unfortunately I was not in the NY area and had to hear Keith Jackson's idiotic call. Nice to hear the Scooter, Bill White and Frank Messer, the best combo ever.

  • @Adulteducation8
    @Adulteducation8 2 года назад +1

    Chris Chambliss is my all-time favorite ballplayer. He really is. A solid 280-290 hitter, great clutch hitter, solid rbi numbers, great reach, maybe not the fastest, solid hits and home run numbers. He never sought the spotlight, he quietly did the job. There's a life lesson in that. And I loved ALL the Yankees players from the mid to late 70s, Ed Figueroa, Roy White, Mackey Rivers, Jim Spencer, Oscar Gamble, Munson, Pinella, Nettles, Jackson, Luis Tiant, Healy, Dent... but it was Chambliss I loved the most.

    • @Music--ng8cd
      @Music--ng8cd Год назад +1

      Willie Randolph, Sparky Lyle, Catfish Hunter, Rich Gossage. Those Yankees were a bigger bunch of mixed nuts than even the 70s Raiders.

    • @NJGuy1973
      @NJGuy1973 3 месяца назад

      ​@@Music--ng8cd"The Bronx Is Burning" is on RUclips.

  • @artyanthony1682
    @artyanthony1682 9 месяцев назад

    I was a sleepy little kid watching this game late at night with my ma on TV...
    I treasure the memories

  • @djm.326
    @djm.326 5 лет назад +2

    LOL...that dude that jumped down as the ball dissapeared into the stands looked like a Spiderman jump. Lol, Holy Mackerel, that had to be 12 feet! Looks hilarious too. Great stuff.

    • @stevstevhoov8288
      @stevstevhoov8288 5 лет назад

      dude probably broke his arm,..buncha people just falling out there,..

  • @OroborusFMA
    @OroborusFMA 7 лет назад +28

    The Scooter was the greatest.

  • @TonyTone1
    @TonyTone1 6 лет назад +1

    Wow, what a game finish, fans went crazy and were able to go on the field and congratulate Chris Chamberlain. How times have change.

    • @vicepresidentmikepence889
      @vicepresidentmikepence889 Год назад

      Congratulate?????😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂. You mean ATTACK!!!

  • @prisoner_of_hope8386
    @prisoner_of_hope8386 Год назад

    I’m here 45 years later😊❤😊

  • @mariodearco5685
    @mariodearco5685 3 года назад +1

    I just about hit the ceiling when Chambliss hit this out. I waited 12 long years for the Yankees to return. We just couldn’t stop talking about this the next morning at work.

  • @ralphlaureano2468
    @ralphlaureano2468 2 года назад +1

    As a life long mets fan, I appreciate Phil rizzuto's call

  • @SteveGee1986
    @SteveGee1986 2 года назад

    Sox fan here. I was 8 years old when I watched this. I believe this moment represented a change in an era. First, the Yanks (Steinbrenner) deserve credit for capitalizing on the free agency era. They led the way by sprinkling in FA's to build great teams. Looking back, the battles of the mid and late 70's were unreal.

  • @URNOTGJK
    @URNOTGJK 11 месяцев назад

    I watched this game in my bedroom (in my parents home in Brooklyn, where I spent 100% of my young life) I was so happy, this was the first time I observed success as a Yankees fan.

  • @lemmiwinks09
    @lemmiwinks09 8 лет назад +10

    It'd be nice again if the local TV broadcasters could do the playoffs. I think at the time the LCS could have local TV broadcasts and that's why Scooter was able to make this great call! Also, this broadcast had the center field view of the hit, rather than from the broadcast booth. Most important home run in Yankees history!

    • @epaddon
      @epaddon 8 лет назад +3

      +lemmiwinks09 The reason why local TV used to do the LCS was because incredibly from 1969 through 1975 NBC which had sole control of the TV contract in those days, would 'stagger' the start times and as a consequence the rest of the country would sometimes see only one LCS game while the other was going on elsewhere so the local telecast was a way of guaranteeing the local markets would always see the game start to finish. 1976 was the first year when the LCS games no longer had overlapping start times. But the local telecasts themselves were banned after the 1983 season when some local channels had become cable superstations and thus threatened network ratings nationwide. As a tradeoff though, the local announcers were allowed to do their own radio broadcasts of the World Series, which hadn't been allowed before.

    • @skuter84
      @skuter84 Год назад

      In 1982, the Braves qualified for the NLCS. We waited the WHOLE summer to see if MLB would let WTBS Atlanta(also a superstation) simulcast the series and of course there wasn’t to be any of that. 1983 was the last year that the teams’ local tv broadcasters could have their own postseason telecasts.

  • @hipstereagle6050
    @hipstereagle6050 9 лет назад +10

    My favorite version of the Yankees will always be the Late 70s Billy Martin teams

    • @howie9751
      @howie9751 5 лет назад +1

      The team was better in 1978 with Bob Lemon.

  • @dmromm
    @dmromm 2 года назад +1

    I'll never forget it. Also miss The Scooter

  • @evkeeney2851
    @evkeeney2851 3 года назад +1

    I remember exactly where I was when that happened.....

  • @slotcar0169
    @slotcar0169 2 года назад

    I was 14 years old was that the game with my two older sisters and we were on the field most amazing experience ever !!!!

  • @thedoorman7159
    @thedoorman7159 5 месяцев назад

    My favorite Yankee home run of my life I was 6 yrs old .

    • @Music--ng8cd
      @Music--ng8cd 3 месяца назад

      Maybe Bucky Dent's in '78, but this was more like the Death Star exploding.

  • @alanb287
    @alanb287 4 года назад +1

    It's great to hear Phil's call again

  • @synthman2000
    @synthman2000 4 года назад

    My #1 baseball moment and call of all time. I watched it on WPIX@10 years old.

  • @Godfather1956
    @Godfather1956 3 года назад

    I watched this game in the Day Room in the Air Force dormitory I was living in and it was so exciting to watch! To hear Phil Rizzuto on the call on this video, outstanding!

  • @US_ARMY_25_INF._DIV.
    @US_ARMY_25_INF._DIV. 4 года назад +1

    I miss those days…..listening to Phil....Bill......and Frank in my bedroom at night with the lights off and just the radio on...….

    • @mickeyjudge7298
      @mickeyjudge7298 4 года назад

      Oh hell yes! My baseball awakening was 1967. I was 10. Had to be in bed by 9, so my transistor radio was under my pillow while I listened to the rest of the games, which I believe started at 7, my parents blissfully unaware, me blissfully enjoying the Yanks. It was Scooter, Jerry Coleman, and Joe Garagiola then. The Yanks weren't very good then, but I still enjoyed the exploits of Charlie Smith, Joe Verbanik, Steve Whitaker, and an inspirational guy named Mantle. I was in college when the Chambliss homer got us into the first World Series that I experienced as a Yankee fan. The Reds swept us, but better days were ahead.

  • @SirGhostly
    @SirGhostly 10 лет назад +26

    0:15 oh shit, those guys are jumping down pretty far, that's a good way to break an ankle or a leg haha

    • @MrEguy87
      @MrEguy87 4 года назад +1

      SirGhostly people in New York are no strangers to jumping off of high things 9/11

    • @pearcebernstone9659
      @pearcebernstone9659 4 года назад +2

      Those kids were Larry Lawton and his brother

    • @AAli220
      @AAli220 4 года назад +8

      MrEguy87 what the fuck is wrong with you

    • @ThomasBahamas
      @ThomasBahamas 3 года назад

      @@MrEguy87 Well...that escalated quickly

    • @FREDDIEHUBBARDMUSIC
      @FREDDIEHUBBARDMUSIC 2 года назад

      Looked like a World trade jumper. Crazy

  • @thedubbman4453
    @thedubbman4453 3 года назад

    We finally got you guys back in '80, took us long enough!!!!

  • @JahBronee
    @JahBronee 3 года назад +1

    Ho-lee Cow! I remember watching on WPIX!

  • @FUZYsquatch
    @FUZYsquatch 4 года назад +4

    Notice the fans jumping down to get the ball at 0:14. Is that Larry Lawton?

  • @loyaldude10
    @loyaldude10 5 лет назад +4

    Billy martin loved Chambliss for his consistency

  • @1986SSMONTECARLO
    @1986SSMONTECARLO 7 лет назад +4

    ''As dramatic a finish as you'd ever wanna see''

  • @LUKESTRONG4LIFE
    @LUKESTRONG4LIFE 10 лет назад

    Thanks Paul for another great memory! What a game and a time in history!

  • @1223jamez
    @1223jamez 7 лет назад +1

    Watching this game with my mom!I was 15 years old.

  • @TheBatugan77
    @TheBatugan77 5 лет назад +1

    I remember this game like it was 43 years ago yesterday...

  • @michaelgibsontv
    @michaelgibsontv 3 года назад

    Just a great announcing job. And what a monster shot by Chambliss!!

  • @tomc2376
    @tomc2376 9 месяцев назад

    Chris was a great RBI man in the 70s and a great coach with the Yankees in the 90s

  • @callioud175
    @callioud175 2 года назад

    Such a great memory as a kid !!! Such excitement

  • @NYVoice
    @NYVoice 10 лет назад

    I was watching it that night as well. Right in Chambliss's wheelhouse. A very sudden exciting ending. I got his autograph on my baseball a year or two later.

  • @BENJ1969
    @BENJ1969 9 лет назад +1

    The summer of my hs frosh year. It was the bicentennial summer, one of the best of my life, and thi sis how it ended. I'd been a Royals fans since 71-72, and can still see Freddy Patek siting in the dugout devastated. My first crushing sports moment since the Canadiens beat the Canadiens beat my Blackhawks in 73.

    • @dzanier
      @dzanier 9 лет назад

      Actually, the picture of Patek sitting on the bench was after the Royals lost the ALCS in 1977.

  • @user-zd5ju8nr5z
    @user-zd5ju8nr5z 9 месяцев назад +1

    Can you imagine fans rushing the field like this at a professional game now. I bet these fans didn't pay $1200 for a ticket. Real fans.

  • @laymestanley-lm8of
    @laymestanley-lm8of 6 месяцев назад

    I was a 10yr old kid there with my dad. It was a surreal moment. That era of storming the field is gone for good. Today's generation couldn't handle the mayhem.

    • @Music--ng8cd
      @Music--ng8cd 3 месяца назад

      Happens in college football sometimes. Or when they disassembled the goal posts and passed them up the stadium.

  • @dzanier
    @dzanier 10 лет назад +2

    I agree to a point, and I'm a Yankee fan. But this pennant win came after a 12-year draught. The fans hadn't been used to going that long without a winner being that the team won 29 pennants between 1921 and 1964. This was special beyond words; even more special than Aaron Boone's pennant winning homer.

  • @vedere2
    @vedere2 10 лет назад

    Wow, just before I went to sleep last night, I wondered if anyone had posted the WPIX version on youtube. And this was posted just two weeks ago? Love it!

    • @danielkelegian5306
      @danielkelegian5306 10 лет назад

      Good Call. The only other video you could catch this HR on was a Greatest HR's of all time video.

  • @alexanderkuczyk7391
    @alexanderkuczyk7391 2 года назад

    I remember watching this and Loving when Yankee Fans and Yankee Players knew it was a game winning Home Run. I was 13 and still remember it like it was a recent game.

  • @MrEguy87
    @MrEguy87 4 года назад +3

    Anyone else here because Scott van pelt just told you too look this up?

  • @erdman1149
    @erdman1149 10 лет назад +1

    Thanks Scott!

  • @msquaretheoriginal
    @msquaretheoriginal 10 лет назад +4

    Much better call than Cosell stepping on Keith Jackson. This is the one I remember as the local WPIX broadcast was way preferable to the networks, particularly National League-oriented NBC.

  • @garygiampa4175
    @garygiampa4175 5 лет назад +2

    hi great home run wow what a team

  • @dzanier
    @dzanier 10 лет назад

    To Yanksatshea, I want to say thank you for this. Finally. I've never seen this clip in its entirety. I had always seen up until, "as dramatic a finish as you'd ever want to see".