1965 World Series, Game 7: Dodgers @ Twins

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  • Опубликовано: 4 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @qwj68boots
    @qwj68boots 2 года назад +15

    On this day in which Vin Scully died, I listened to this and other Scully broadcasts. There was no other way I could salute this genius of a man than that.

  • @viralbuthow000
    @viralbuthow000 4 года назад +24

    Watching Koufax pitch. No words.

  • @smarlonc
    @smarlonc 9 лет назад +65

    I was fortunate enough to attend games 6 and 7 in Minneapolis with my father. We rooted for the Twins in game 6, got our wish and were able to witness one of the greatest game 7 pitching performances ever. Fond, lasting memories for an 11 year-old.

    • @bjdunnell1477
      @bjdunnell1477 2 года назад +2

      I am a fellow Minnesotan, and what an experience that mustve been at The Met. The only downfall of that week had to be Koufax being Koufax

    • @lofijedi
      @lofijedi 2 года назад

      Hope you’re doing well @smarlonc

    • @smarlonc
      @smarlonc 2 года назад +1

      @@lofijedi Doing very well, thank you.

    • @thomascorder6686
      @thomascorder6686 2 года назад

      I too was 11 years old and brought a tv to the classroom and watched my Dodgers win!

  • @u.spatriot6469
    @u.spatriot6469 2 года назад +16

    When baseball players had CLASS!!!!!!!! Never will there ever be another like Sandy Koufax. This is true GREATNESS

  • @DONGOE
    @DONGOE 9 лет назад +277

    Vin Scully, simply the best ever to announce any sport.

  • @TheSlandis
    @TheSlandis 9 лет назад +113

    It's so comforting to hear Vin Scully announce a Dodger game. I grew up listening or watching every Dodger game.

    • @nutsackmania
      @nutsackmania 9 лет назад

      +Sean Landis Wow what a life you had.

    • @remmymafia3889
      @remmymafia3889 6 лет назад +3

      ditto-I'll pull up different games on RUclips, so as I can listen to that golden voice. He could make the most mundane game interesting with his selected oratory on some game related story. A true legend.

    • @alansands256
      @alansands256 6 лет назад +4

      In the 80s KTTV 11 would show EVERY road game. Alot of us became fans because of those broadcasts. Its a shame its not as accesible as it used to be, not to mention all the other nonsense that has kids attention these days.

    • @remmymafia3889
      @remmymafia3889 6 лет назад +4

      Growing up less than 300 miles away in Las Vegas (1955 b), there of course wasn't any such thing as cable television. Unlike Southern Cal., which atleast had multiple independent stations such as the aforementioned KTTV channel11, we didn't pick up our first non 'big three' station until around 1968-69, which was PBS, and maybe a year or two later we produced our first true (non-PBS) independent station, which didn't carry any sports. Because of such, we grew up with the Saturday Game Of The Week, the All Star Game and of course the World Series. However, we always had on the AM radio dial, Vin Scully and his beloved Dodgers, along with Dick Enberg and the fledgling Angels (1961). My baseball loving friends all listened to the Dodgers, and of course some of them also the Angels. Vin Scully rightfully became an icon within my circle of friends and of course all Dodger fans everywhere. His story telling ability while not missing a beat in calling the play by play was unmatched I'd have to say. Very clever,and articulate, very deserving of his national broadcasting career. He livened up many a day/night, throughout my childhood and teen years.

    • @joedebaun4547
      @joedebaun4547 4 года назад +2

      And I would watch and listen to Dick Enberg to every Angels game.

  • @brmillgr
    @brmillgr 11 лет назад +118

    "Why did I decide to go with Sandy Koufax? Because he's Sandy Koufax."

    • @petersclafani4370
      @petersclafani4370 4 года назад +4

      Sandy koufax went to my high school.

    • @rem-so1ly
      @rem-so1ly 4 года назад +2

      @MUFC Soccer is as boring as watching paint dry. No one here gives a damn about soccer

    • @djrandallp
      @djrandallp 4 года назад

      @MUFC This might be the dumbest comment ever.

    • @johnfurgele9962
      @johnfurgele9962 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yep! I'm reading the Jane Leavy book about him as we speak

    • @davidhansen8861
      @davidhansen8861 3 месяца назад +1

      Great comments

  • @kothejunglist
    @kothejunglist 2 года назад +19

    Vin had already been broadcasting for 15 years when announcing this game. What a GOAT.

  • @knoxbox1212
    @knoxbox1212 10 лет назад +72

    I never had the privilege of watching Koufax live, so, thank you youtube. Vin Scully is a boss...Go Dodgers!

    • @johnl.5303
      @johnl.5303 10 лет назад +7

      I saw Koufax and Drysdale pitch in a double-header against the Cin. Reds. Both pitched gems.

    • @tomsmith5216
      @tomsmith5216 6 лет назад +6

      I saw him beat our Giants regularly. He was incredible.

    • @ttownkeith
      @ttownkeith 4 года назад +1

      Ironically enough, I saw Koufax live only once: In a game against the lowly Mets at Shea Stadium in 1965. The Mets knocked him out of the box in the 1st inning.

    • @steverenom.299
      @steverenom.299 4 года назад +1

      I used to say the the best pitcher I had ever seen (over a short period of time) was Koufax until
      I saw Pedro Martinez.

    • @fredmar6436
      @fredmar6436 2 года назад

      @@steverenom.299 He wasn't a complete game pitcher like Koufax. BIG DIFFERENCE.

  • @steverodgers5958
    @steverodgers5958 10 лет назад +33

    Sandy Koufax was one of my idols growing up and playing baseball as a kid.Great memories.And it was a much better world back then as well !

    • @wowihaveachannel4862
      @wowihaveachannel4862 2 года назад

      Everyone says that but looking back I think things are just different not better or worse.
      But what I do see today is the divide we have in the US. It's going to be a civil war if we're not careful. Thanks Trump.

    • @fromulus
      @fromulus Год назад +1

      Only if you were in a certain demographic, it was much worse for everyone else.

    • @theRealUmpZY
      @theRealUmpZY Год назад +1

      @@fromulus 🤓

    • @avelinaosborne32
      @avelinaosborne32 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@fromulus ha ha looser!

    • @mradvance2go17
      @mradvance2go17 3 месяца назад

      It was better when you posted this comment!!

  • @DA-hw6rd
    @DA-hw6rd 9 лет назад +75

    Fifty years ago, and Vin Scully sounds exactly the same. Just incredible. Hope you're feeling better, Vin!

    • @tahoepoet
      @tahoepoet 7 лет назад +3

      Vinny starts his half of the broadcast at 1:16:57

    • @edmondwynn174
      @edmondwynn174 5 лет назад +1

      W

    • @ADEAL918
      @ADEAL918 5 лет назад +2

      tahoepoet yep, before that it was Twins broadcaster Ray Scott. Back then the TV networks didn't have their own announcers for baseball--the broadcasts were done in alternating shifts by the broadcasters of the participating teams.

    • @ttownkeith
      @ttownkeith 4 года назад +2

      @@ADEAL918 Ray Scott was great as the Packers announcer.

    • @malbuff
      @malbuff 4 года назад +1

      @@ttownkeith In the late '60s for some reason he was doing Washington Senators baseball too. Terrible team-- but that voice!

  • @clydeb7713
    @clydeb7713 5 лет назад +79

    A complete game in a world series with 2 days rest and an arthritic elbow in his pitching arm. Koufax was the essence of greatness.

    • @EZEKNOWS
      @EZEKNOWS 2 года назад

      W c
      1d1q1q111111111111111111111111q1111111111111111q11q111¹q¹¹¹q¹qqqqq. de f1

    • @georgegoble6054
      @georgegoble6054 2 года назад +2

      i just saw that guy still looks great, ageless,,i was a dodgers fan in the 80s then braves since i'm from the south we had every braves game for about 20 years, the 90s were ridiculously grreat for the braves, I watched probably 100 complete games per year, but for the last decade i guess just the reality of how slow the sport is and how fast society moves and information, there;s always something more interesting than baseball to pay attention to, so this might be more info than u ever wanted to read but until baseball gets a pitch clock and roboump to fix the ridiculous bad ball strike calls from these old men, i cant carve out time for a pasttime as baseball bills itself which is irrelevant in the current modern
      world, there are 100s of more interesting ways to pass the time today and
      baseball wants it to be 1920 into perpetuity and baseball is always bringing up the rear, how about how silly baseball was taking 20 more years than football to simply review all of the horrific calls
      from these umps, baseball had cameras everywhere and couldnt rewind them to fix their mistakes for some reason, cost that one guy a perfect game in the 90s on that first base call guy was out by a step and 1/2, i called MLB in NYC and told them they suck and they need to modernize they havent listened to me yet

    • @wowihaveachannel4862
      @wowihaveachannel4862 2 года назад +4

      And shutout! Unheard of today

    • @clydeb7713
      @clydeb7713 2 года назад +6

      @@wowihaveachannel4862 Sometimes his elbow hurt soo badly he could only throw straight heaters! Struck out 15 NY Yankees in a World Series game! Yogi once said " I could see how he won 25 games, but how did he ever 🤔 lose 5?"

    • @wowihaveachannel4862
      @wowihaveachannel4862 2 года назад +2

      @@clydeb7713 this is the 1st time I've seen him pitch on TV (born in 68) and I was surprised thinking back because the catcher for the dodgers in the pregame interview said he had to keep the ball down. But his high fastball looked untouchable to me.

  • @davidbergin6184
    @davidbergin6184 6 лет назад +9

    I was in 4th grade when this game was played. This is the first time I’ve seen it. Overwhelming respect for Sandy Koufax. His curveball wasn’t working but his fastball was good enough to get a 3 hit shutout over the heavy hitting Minnesota Twins. Sandy was probably the most elegant pitcher I’ve ever seen.

  • @jb47vintage
    @jb47vintage 10 лет назад +115

    I'm lost in admiration of Koufax and I've been a Giant's fan since 1958. But you'd have to blind not to see his greatness.

    • @frederickrapp5396
      @frederickrapp5396 5 лет назад +1

      jb47vintage Yes, for the last 5 years of his career he was great. But for the first 5 years of his career he was rather mediocre at best. You should judge him on his entire career, not just for 1/2 of it.

    • @wbmstr24
      @wbmstr24 5 лет назад +10

      @@frederickrapp5396 he was signed as a 'bonus baby', the staff when he was signed, already had an established good ration.
      Since he was signed as a BB, he couldnt go to the minors for any sort of practice, and so got zero seasoning or practice, and with the established rotation in brooklyn, he got very few if any starts or relief appearances, he simply had no opportunity to grow, thus he wasnt a superstar yet....once he became regular in the rotation, notice the difference...
      read jane leavey's excellent bio of SK and you will get all the details you need about his supposed 'mediocre' early career.

    • @frederickrapp5396
      @frederickrapp5396 5 лет назад +1

      frank tomasic Thank you. I’ll try to find the book you mentioned.

    • @djf750
      @djf750 4 года назад

      @@wbmstr24 great book!

    • @wbmstr24
      @wbmstr24 4 года назад +1

      Yup, love it

  • @dougmilesmedia
    @dougmilesmedia 4 года назад +4

    A simpler and much better time for broadcasting. One announcer doing the play-by-play, no annoying color man, very few graphics and replays. We need to go back to that. Vin's the best ever.

  • @timjohnson5519
    @timjohnson5519 4 года назад +8

    What a performance by Sandy Koufax and pretty modest in victory. Great pitcher, my hero. Listened to this game on radio as a boy.

  • @DONGOE
    @DONGOE 9 лет назад +61

    2:25:20 - Sandy Koufax - a great pitcher and a total class act.

  • @fasteddie9055
    @fasteddie9055 10 лет назад +3

    I was stationed overseas during this series. We heard it in the barracks on Armed Forces Radio. TY for a great treat and fine memories.

    • @gargould7186
      @gargould7186 4 года назад

      Que sere sere they were not even excited walking off the Field 😵.

  • @joemcilnen3136
    @joemcilnen3136 10 лет назад +69

    The greatest pitcher of all time!!

    • @frederickrapp5396
      @frederickrapp5396 3 года назад +2

      Yes he was, but only from 1961-1966. Not from all time.

    • @lloydkline1518
      @lloydkline1518 3 года назад +1

      Sandy Koufax brilliant 1960s pitcher

    • @diamonddog13
      @diamonddog13 2 года назад +1

      @Lighthouse in the Storm Those were great seasons. But that was during a pitching-dominant era. In terms of ERA+ which adjusts for league averages, Pedro Martinez had the most dominant seasons in 1999 and 2000.

    • @fredmar6436
      @fredmar6436 2 года назад +1

      @@diamonddog13 Pedro wasn't a complete game pitcher like Koufax. BIG DIFFERENCE.

  • @GSInterestedParty1001
    @GSInterestedParty1001 Год назад +6

    Koufax Scully two of the best ever!

    • @GSInterestedParty1001
      @GSInterestedParty1001 Год назад +3

      This is the way the game should be played. No pounding their chests no show boating no gold around their necks. Just play the game

  • @bobbowie9350
    @bobbowie9350 4 года назад +15

    theres a comfort in watching this knowing the great koufax and the great scully are still with us.
    awesome footage

  • @jpcfit
    @jpcfit 11 лет назад +8

    Haven't seen this game in its entirety since the original broadcast in 1965 when I watched it with my brothers and dad. Thanks for posting this!

  • @mattquintana91
    @mattquintana91 8 лет назад +6

    Simply incredible. Sandy was an absolute BEAST to pitch all nine off a couple days rest with one pitch. It was stated that he never had the feel of his curve the entire out, told his catcher and threw nothing but heaters the rest of the outing. This is pure Dodger royalty right here. Go Blue.

  • @johninjersey
    @johninjersey 10 лет назад +21

    this kind of stuff is what makes youtube great! fantastic! sandy koufax man! game 7 world series complete! and I am there!

    • @waydebaker7743
      @waydebaker7743 7 лет назад

      Jersey John you were there? (This is the coolest conversation I've ever had! What was it like? Was Koufax a poem like they say?)

  • @watsonofbakerstreet
    @watsonofbakerstreet 5 лет назад +9

    It's so great to see this era of baseball!

  • @jrm8899
    @jrm8899 3 года назад +4

    Wow...I was 10 at the time and this was the first W.S. I remember. Such a great time to be a kid growing up!

    • @deepdrag8131
      @deepdrag8131 3 года назад +1

      Great time to be a kid: no seat belts, no safety helmets, and second-hand smoke with every breath you took.
      Especially good time if you were a girl or a POC.

  • @jeffbandle2916
    @jeffbandle2916 5 лет назад +8

    Can you imagine Koufax's career if he had the longevity of Nolan Ryan, who pitched for 27 years, well into his 40s? Such a remarkable talent and I'm glad for these video archives because I was born too late to see him in person.

  • @maleake56
    @maleake56 Год назад +1

    I remember watching this game on TV with my dad. I was 9 and we were living in southern California where I was born. A couple of years earlier I had become a Dodgers fan watching the 1963 World Series. Sandy Koufax was my favorite player and I always loved watching him pitch on TV. This game really brings back memories. It's nice hearing Vin Scully again. I used to listen to him constantly. As for Koufax, he's undoubtedly one of the all time pitching greats and yet he always remained remarkably humble. I always loved watching his pitching form. It's amazing what he did in this game on just two days rest, throwing a 3-hit, 10-strikeout, complete game shutout. Fond memories indeed.

  • @dherz108
    @dherz108 7 лет назад +28

    Koufax on 2 days rest after 300+ innings and 27 complete games...running on fumes without the legendary curveball...still manages a 3 hit shutout (with defensive help). Impressive indeed. I see why he retired after the next year.

    • @Autshot20
      @Autshot20 4 года назад +1

      @dherz Exactly! 300+ IP, 27 CG's then a SHO on 2 days rest. In the game today, after 200+ IPs and zero CG's, a SP comes back on 3 days rest and goes 6 IP, the question is posed, "Is that the guttiest performance ever"?

    • @xmanc5687
      @xmanc5687 4 года назад

      He retired after the next season

    • @joebarr725
      @joebarr725 3 года назад

      You may be able to find Koufax retirement announcement somewhere on YT. He said he retired because he wanted to use his left arm for the rest of his life.

    • @dherz108
      @dherz108 3 года назад

      @@joebarr725 I know. He retired at the end of 1966 season but was in pain for some years prior. He looks great when you see him today. To paraphrase Dick Gregory, a sore arm is not a cortisone deficiency.

    • @arnoldsilveri1932
      @arnoldsilveri1932 3 года назад

      Gilliam made a great play, but in the 1966 World Series, Willie Davis made three errors on two consecutive short fly balls.

  • @agentraichu8595
    @agentraichu8595 10 лет назад +5

    The cool thing to see back then is that everyone is actually paying attention to the game, unlike today where everyone is on their phones

  • @andrewpestotnik5495
    @andrewpestotnik5495 8 лет назад +61

    29:49 "This World Series Game is brought to you in color, exclusively by NBC!" Boy, the colors are really vivid in this one lol

    • @rockyracoon3233
      @rockyracoon3233 4 года назад +4

      They never did color kinescopes.

    • @robbrown6934
      @robbrown6934 4 года назад +3

      Color guard looks great in black ad

    • @joe6096
      @joe6096 4 года назад +2

      It's possible this recording is not the source feed. I don't know where it's from but the actual game was certainly broadcast in color. NBC started broadcasting the World Series in color in 1955, 10 years earlier. So the cameras on the field were definitely color.

    • @rockyracoon3233
      @rockyracoon3233 4 года назад

      @@joe6096 . It would be so awesome to see the 1955 series in color! Too bad video tape was not available that year.

    • @joe6096
      @joe6096 4 года назад +1

      @@rockyracoon3233 And of course a color TV in 1955 was probably the 1955 price equivalent of what a plasma HDTV cost back around 1999-2000. Which I think was in the $10,000 range.

  • @derrickr5716
    @derrickr5716 8 лет назад +11

    When WS game 7 took 2:10 minutes. Wow. Wish I was alive for the classics like these.

    • @felixmadison5736
      @felixmadison5736 8 лет назад +2

      I was 16 in 1965, and yes it was great watching a ball game back then. Seeing the Dodgers beat the Yankees in the 1963 World Series was fantastic!!!

    • @tahoepoet
      @tahoepoet 7 лет назад +1

      was rooting for the Yankees back then, but quite a Series, agree.

    • @sirstephen9825
      @sirstephen9825 4 года назад

      They cut the adds which would have been another 34 minutes

    • @itmsjim
      @itmsjim 4 года назад

      I was alive during this game. I was born in June 1965. Don't recall much, for some reason.

  • @jacoreyharris5250
    @jacoreyharris5250 11 лет назад +10

    Koufax is one of my inspirations

  • @DonC48
    @DonC48 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for posting this one. I was then a dutchman addicted to baseball and had just started my studies at University of Technology in Eindhoven. In those days I knew more about major league baseball than 90% of americans! I read everything and just knew all the statistics of many players. Every saturday and sunday evening from 21.00 onwards I was glued to an old radio picking up the AFN Europe for a ballgame.
    The next 6 years I scored each worldseries game, the reporters were excellent, I just ‘saw’ how they played. Vin Sculley, PeeWee Reese, Joe Garagiola. Great stories, lots of banter and boy, they knew baseball! It was 10 years later I visited the USA for the first time and saw a game at Anaheim and later one in Chavez Ravine. It was like coming home!
    I played with the same number on my uniform as Sandy Koufax: 32.
    Those were the days.
    If anyone had told me in 1965 that I would be watching this game 53 years later on a thing called iPad I would have told him ‘good James Bond story but don’t be silly!’. Makes me curious what will happen in the next 50 years!

    • @Tookitout
      @Tookitout 4 года назад

      mgjb Thanks for the best comment on this thread! -USA

  • @714AD
    @714AD 11 лет назад +10

    This was Sandy's last World Championship as Baltimore won in '66, which was also his final season.. Such a young age to retire with an incredible level of excellence on the table..

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 Год назад +1

      By the end of the 66 season, Koufax' elbow was hanging on by a tendon.

  • @MrPeterhemm
    @MrPeterhemm 10 лет назад +7

    Thank you for providing this gem of a game. Some of my fondest childhood memories were watching from behind home plate as Sandy Koufax pitched at Dodger Stadium. Pure magic!

    • @curtisjones400
      @curtisjones400 9 лет назад +2

      Peter Hemm he had a blazing fastball the batters never saw it coming-

    • @dannysunay8099
      @dannysunay8099 4 года назад +2

      I envy you.

  • @jln55
    @jln55 11 лет назад +31

    I heard that Koufax was in agony throughout this game, and willed his arm to get through the game. Great memories for me; the first WS I watched in entirety.

    • @ADEAL918
      @ADEAL918 6 лет назад +9

      He was in agony the entire last two seasons he pitched. And the crazy thing about this game was that he said after the game (and Scully commented on it several times too) that he couldn't get his curve ball over at all, so he basically just went with all fastballs the whole game.

    • @dimbulb1178
      @dimbulb1178 5 лет назад +2

      The same was true of Pedro Martinez in the 1999 postseason and much of the 2000 and 2001 regular seasons. He pitched six no-hit innings against the Indians in the ALDS despite not being able to throw changeups or fastballs due to a back injury (he had the best fastball, best changeup, and best curveball in the game back then). He had suffered from shoulder problems earlier in the season and again in. 2000; he was lost for nearly three months in 2001 due to a rotator cuff injury. Had he been healthy 1999-2001, he might have had the three best seasons ever by a starting pitcher -- consecutively no less.

    • @wacco54
      @wacco54 4 года назад +4

      @@dimbulb1178 Tom Seaver tells the story of his three hundredth win pitching for the Chicago White Sox. After warming up Chicago catcher Carlton Fisk tells Tom "you have nothing working". Seavers reply, " Yes, but they don't know that".

    • @martinschwarz1066
      @martinschwarz1066 4 года назад +1

      As a native New Yorker, Koufax and Seaver were (are) my favorite pitchers.

  • @CarlDuke
    @CarlDuke 11 лет назад +2

    Back then, they used the announcers of the team's involved, rather than so called national announcers. A much better system. They were usually better and certainly more knowledgeable as concerns facts about the teams. Thanks so much for posting this.

  • @dannysunay8099
    @dannysunay8099 4 года назад +2

    I was there not too long ago. Scully is a portal to the past very few of us will recall. Ah what pump and circumstance! Thank you very much vinny!!!❤⚾️

  • @kiowastew
    @kiowastew 4 года назад +3

    Always, ALWAYS, ALWAYS GOOD TO HEAR VIN SCULLY AGAIN!

  • @Gravitas37
    @Gravitas37 11 лет назад +19

    At 2:22:32 the World Series ends like it's just a regular game, no wild celebration on the field. Things were so different back in the day...

    • @malbuff
      @malbuff 4 года назад +4

      And played in the afternoon. In those days, Baseball to national TV: "We're playing the game at 1. We'd sure like you guys to come out and cover it." National TV: "OK." Nowadays, TV to baseball: "Hold on. We'll tell you when you can start the game, thank you SO much." Baseball: "OK, whatever you say."

  • @salvadorcamacho9151
    @salvadorcamacho9151 4 года назад +2

    I can listen to mr. scully all day. He is just so delightful.

  • @felixmadison5736
    @felixmadison5736 8 лет назад +17

    I was a lefty pitcher in high school in 1965 and my two idols were Sandy Koufax and Willie Mays. Numbers 32 and 24 for the Dodgers and Giants. Never be another pitcher or position player like either one of these two greats.

    • @danschneck3141
      @danschneck3141 6 лет назад +7

      I'm a 57 year Giants fan, who loved Mays and Marichal, BUT I must admit, Koufax is still the greatest pitcher I've ever seen! I hated him when he played (especially against us!!) and used to wish that we could trade for him. Having a big 3 of: Koufax, Marichal and Gaylord Perry, would have made the Giants unbeatable. Best Offense: Mays, Cepeda, McCovey, the Alou's, and Jim Ray Hart, and other favs like: Jose Pagan, Harvey Kuenn, Jim Davenport, Chuck Hiller, Ed Bailey, and Tom Haller. I'm dreaming again.......... sorry, at 61, I should be too old to dream! It only took 50 seasons for me to see a Giants WS victory, wish my dad could have seen it........

    • @djf750
      @djf750 4 года назад +1

      I agree , Koufax and Mays...GOAT

    • @djf750
      @djf750 4 года назад +1

      @@danschneck3141 I'm an OLD Dodger fan, hated the Giants TEAM, but not individually.
      Mays is the GOAT non-pitcher and there was nothing like a Koufax-Marichal matchup from Candlestick , where it might be 80 and sunny, or 50 and foggy or a windy cold night

    • @HughAskew2
      @HughAskew2 4 года назад +1

      @@danschneck3141 I was a Dodger fan, and wanted to trade Osteen for Juan.
      I knew they would never part with Mays, Cepeda, or Alou - you would have had to be all out insane to even think of such a thing - but I figured if the price was right, JM could have worn Dodger blue - and become a superstar ;)

    • @ShunyamNiketana
      @ShunyamNiketana 4 года назад +1

      I saw Mays homer off Koufax on 8/22/65, the game of the infamous brawl. I think that Koufax was rattled after that horrible fight, so he walked the next two hitters after Marichal. Then came Mays. The ball landed high in the stands of left center, almost out of the stadium, in the days before they extended the lower deck all the way to the right field line and wrapped the upper deck all the way around as well. It was a vicious fight, two giants wielding bats like batons. They pulled Koufax after Mays' HR. It was one of the most exciting moments of my childhood, seeing that ball sail so high and far, watching from behind third base and down the line a bit. The wail that filled the stadium when the fight erupted was replaced by a celebratory roar.

  • @jamesthomas788
    @jamesthomas788 4 года назад +3

    What a treat to watch Sandy Koufax pitch for the first time. He was a little bit before my but the great players for the Dodgers and Twins. Drysdale,Wills,Willie Davis,Fairly,Roseboro,Oliva,Killebrew ,Allison,Kaat,Muscat Grant.

  • @loyaldude10
    @loyaldude10 9 лет назад +48

    hard to believe this game was nearly 50 years ago. Majority of players still alive, as is Vince Scully. Dodgers who are deceased are Drysdale, Gilliam, W Davis, Roseboro. Twins deceased are Killebrew, Allison, Mincher, Allison, Battey, Versailles. RIP guys and thanks for a great series and memories

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад

      loyaldude10 The '65 World Series will be 53 years old this coming October. "Nearly 50 years old"?!? God, you'rea f***ing idiot! 😠😠😠😠😠

    • @wst-bd7hh
      @wst-bd7hh 6 лет назад +15

      No you are Dumb ASS ! he wrote that post 3 years ago ..

    • @spryfolII
      @spryfolII 6 лет назад +1

      The Crickets are brought to you by The Gillette Razor Company. That was funny. I guess dude doesn't read "all" of the post. Then put all of those upset emojies on it. I couldn't stop laughing.

    • @toscodav
      @toscodav 6 лет назад +5

      god you're stupid. His post is 3 years old dumb ass

    • @remmymafia3889
      @remmymafia3889 6 лет назад +1

      There was a neat first time distinction in game one of this World Series. The starting infield for the Dodgers were all switch hitters. Jim Gilliam 3b, Maury Wills ss, NL Rookie Of The Year, Jim LeFevbre 2b and Wes Parker 1b.

  • @jimistreets1
    @jimistreets1 11 лет назад +14

    Back then, the players had something that too many players lack today: CLASS. Sandy Koufax was and is a gentleman as was Walter Alston. Of course Vin Scully is still the best, 50 years after this game! I recall that in the late 60's and early 70's Vin would call World Series games on the networks. There are barely a handful of great baseball announcers left and if I have to listen to Ernie Johnson call any more games I will go nuts.

  • @Lava1964
    @Lava1964 11 лет назад +4

    Another great game from the archives. Thanks for posting it! (Notice that not once did anyone mention pitch counts!)

  • @drizzle452
    @drizzle452 4 года назад +2

    I was watching the 52 World Series the other day and boy, the pitching looks so much better here. Kaat and Koufax look like they’re pitching with their legs and have some really good movement

  • @HughAskew2
    @HughAskew2 4 года назад +4

    Koufax was flat out scary good.

  • @kylerwurzer
    @kylerwurzer 4 года назад +1

    Quick story. My grandpa got to go to this game with his mom. (my great grandma.) His dad. (My great grandpa.) Got tickets for the game through his work company. His mom surprised him with tickets. She had told him he wasn’t going to school. He was shocked. His dad had gotten them tickets to view the game. Although his dad couldn’t go, his mom took him to view the game. It was one of the many stories he told about his mom. He said it was amazing to see Sandy Koufax play and it was awesome to have gone to game 7 of the World Series. One story that I will never forget. 🙏🏻

  • @encinostalgia
    @encinostalgia 9 лет назад +4

    50 Years, thanks for letting us see it!

  • @johnperrigo6474
    @johnperrigo6474 2 года назад +1

    It's a pleasure to listen to how they announced the games back then. So much easier on the ears.

  • @curtismcintosh9773
    @curtismcintosh9773 10 лет назад +20

    This was a great performance by Sandy Koufax. You can see he was really struggling in the middle innings, pitching on only 2 days rest. It seemed to me that only after Killebrew got the 1 out hit in the 9th inning that Koufax decided to really let loose with his fastball and get the game over with. He just blew away the last 2 hitters.

    • @johnl.5303
      @johnl.5303 10 лет назад +4

      He only had one pitch - the fastball. His curve wasn't working.

    • @cujola
      @cujola 10 лет назад +2

      John Lue As you watch the game, you can see he is pacing himself and spotting his fastball. In the 9th inning, you can see he really rears back and lets loose with the fastball. The batters never had a chance.

    • @billslocum9819
      @billslocum9819 10 лет назад +1

      John Lue He gets over a couple of curves in the seventh, and a couple more thereafter, but he clearly had no confidence in it and most of his curves that day were for balls.

    • @tahoepoet
      @tahoepoet 7 лет назад +1

      Bill, check out the 4th inning. 1-2-3 and plenty of curves, except to Oliva.

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад

      Bill Slocum WRONG!!!!! 😠😠😠😠😠 His curve ball just failed to workout Koufax that Game 7. Get your Dodger/World Series history straight, f***ing idiot! 😡😡😡😡😡

  • @714AD
    @714AD 11 лет назад +4

    This was 2 years before I started following the game. Never saw the Great Koufax pitch until now.

  • @jamesanderson1687
    @jamesanderson1687 10 лет назад +10

    Koufax was not what one would describe as your intimidating pitcher like Drysdale or Gibson. Koufax did not brush back hitters or knock a hitter down like Gibson and Drysdale would. If Koufax had that nasty streak, he'd likely would have struck out over 400 batters in '65. You see, Koufax still holds the major league record for most innings pitched in one season without hitting a single batter, 323 innings. His knee buckling curveball and vicious fastball, made Koufax the most dominate pitcher not only of his era but arguably all of baseball. When MLB chose it's all 20th Century team, he was chosen as the starting lefthanded pitcher for the all-century team. In this game, Koufax was pitching with two days rest following pitching over 300 innings for the season. Koufax was facing the most potent offense in the American League.

    • @clintwilson6380
      @clintwilson6380 6 лет назад +3

      The Jane Levy book on Koufax was one of the best sports bios I've ever read. And I've read it 5 times. Look it up if you haven't yet.

    • @MickeyMorandini1
      @MickeyMorandini1 5 лет назад +1

      Sandy is a good person. a gentlemen

    • @carlmarks8170
      @carlmarks8170 4 года назад

      *dominant*

    • @arnoldsilveri1932
      @arnoldsilveri1932 3 года назад

      Koufax hit just 18 batters in his career. That's 1.5 batters per season. As I stated many times, he was chosen as the left-hander, Ryan was the right-hander on the starting All-Century Team. Moreover, Koufax was voted as the greatest pitcher along with Bench, Aaron and Mays as the greatest living players. They were celebrated at the All-Star game in Cincinnati in 2008. Also, Koufax pitched 300 innings-or-more three times, struck out at least 300 batters and started at least 40 games--"three times." The only other pitchers to accomplish that feat were: Tim Keefe and Amos Rusie, who pitched between 1880 and 1891. If you read my e-book: "Why You Can't Clone Koufax," you'll see many other examples why (statistically) Koufax was the best for five consecutive years. 1962-1966.

  • @timniles6961
    @timniles6961 6 лет назад +3

    I was fifteen and in high school - in Cherokee, Iowa though we had lived in the Twin Cities for many years (and would again) please note that ALL World Series games then were played during daylight then and that without all the playoff games, that the world series ended by the middle of October. Our high school allowed teachers to bring in a TV to the study hall so we could watch an hour of these games at a time... but for me this game was 'covered' by other classes, with the game ending (an irony in that) while I was in phys ed, playing touch football. So until this youtube entry I had not seen this game. Much obliged! TN

  • @pac401
    @pac401 10 лет назад +57

    Amazing that Sandy pitched a complete game. Even after giving up a hit in the 9th. I miss those days of starters going the distance. Now they over manage too much.

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 9 лет назад +7

      pac401 What's really amazing is that Koufax came in on only two days' rest, using a bad arm eaten up with arthritis, and only one year from retirement. Oddly, Jim Lonborg tried to do the same thing in 1967; and, although Lonborg was bigger, stronger and healthier than Koufax, he did not make it very far.

    • @loyaldude10
      @loyaldude10 9 лет назад +8

      David Lafleche and Koufax won game throwing almost exclusively fastballs. Twins were a very good hitting team, knew what was coming and they still couldn't score on him

    • @curtisjones400
      @curtisjones400 9 лет назад +10

      Henry Tchop yea if Sandy Koufax was young and playing ball today he would have such a fantastic career-there are only two other pitchers that impressed me as much as Sandy Koufax and they were Bob Gibson and Tom Seaver

    • @chrisromo8218
      @chrisromo8218 9 лет назад +1

      Henry Tchop

    • @AnArchyRulzz
      @AnArchyRulzz 7 лет назад +7

      Well Koufax pitching so much likely contributed to his early retirement.

  • @ms-iz9ye
    @ms-iz9ye 8 лет назад +7

    Watching this match makes me wish someone would post one of Sandys no hitter games. I'd pay dearly to see that on RUclips.

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 6 лет назад

      marvin s It's a baseball game, not a "match," f**ing moron! What the hell you think you're watching...soccer?!? F***ing idiot! 😬😬😬😬😬

    • @oldiesgeek1
      @oldiesgeek1 6 лет назад +1

      Don't be too hard on him. He's probably not from America, and in his native country, games like soccer are called a match, not a game.

    • @ttownkeith
      @ttownkeith 4 года назад +2

      @@dariowiter3078 3 abusive comments out of 3. WTF is wrong with you? I pity you.

  • @charlesvolcher2454
    @charlesvolcher2454 8 лет назад +5

    there will NEVER be another Sandy Kofax

    • @pryderipwyll3479
      @pryderipwyll3479 8 лет назад +2

      If five years is the test, I agree. My Favorite. If ten years, I have other names. My family plays a game. We draft teams from the all-timers-it's awesome. But it's a ten year game. Can't have Koufax 1st 5 years as a starter

    • @tahoepoet
      @tahoepoet 7 лет назад

      You'd be better off having Koufax's LAST 5 years as a starter.
      Saw Koufax pitch at the Coliseum in '61, though. He was just getting his stuff then -- beat the Cardinals 2-1.

    • @fredflagstone9467
      @fredflagstone9467 7 лет назад

      Charles Volcher Ron Guidry, Clayton Kershaw were /are similar to Koufax.

    • @jbjumpkin6611
      @jbjumpkin6611 2 года назад

      @@fredflagstone9467 No; they're not even close to Koufax in similarity. Very different mechanics; style.

  • @greenwolfegreen6028
    @greenwolfegreen6028 7 лет назад +2

    Ray Scott was the best football announcer I ever heard.

  • @secondstring
    @secondstring 4 года назад +12

    One World Series record for sure in this game....mildest victory celebration ever after the final out.

  • @richardstrom5150
    @richardstrom5150 Год назад +1

    Twins were number 1 in runs, and koufax shut them out twice. From sept 9 to end of WS, koufax threw 6 shutouts including a perfect game vs cubs and crucial end of sept vs #1 in NL runs Reds shutout. 1965 has to be the most clutch end of season pitching performance in history. The Left Arm Of God.

    • @calronske1853
      @calronske1853 8 месяцев назад

      Reading a Koufax book right now covering his life/career and that Sept. 9th game vs the Cubs in detail. To do all that you mentioned with an arm ready to fall off is beyond belief.

  • @MrGeorgewf
    @MrGeorgewf 11 лет назад +7

    Two great announcers Vince Skully of the Dodgers, and Ray Scott of the Minnesota Twins. Ray Scott was also the announcer for the Green Bay Packers in those days. They were great announcers describing the game without all that constant chatter you hear today. Oh for the old days.

    • @stewartberger7734
      @stewartberger7734 4 года назад +1

      Scott a great NFL announcer. Did a fantastic job with the Twins too

  • @loverofcalifornia3619
    @loverofcalifornia3619 2 года назад

    I was such a Dodger fan in those days and had a crush on Koufax. Koufax/Drysdale...those were the glory days!

  • @Tanamarito
    @Tanamarito 10 лет назад +6

    Two shut outs in three days, a display of ability, courage and work ethics. These days pitchers go six or seven innings and they call it a ´´quality start.´´
    I remember this game vividly, as I listened to the radio broadcast. Sandy was throwing smoke.

    • @tahoepoet
      @tahoepoet 7 лет назад +4

      How dear to my heart was the old-fashioned hurler
      who labored all day on the old village green.
      He did not resemble the up-to-date twirler
      who pitches four innings and ducks from the scene.
      The up-to-date twirler I’’m not very strong for;
      He has a queer habit of pulling up lame.
      And that is the reason I hanker and long for
      the pitcher who started and finished the game.
      The old-fashioned pitcher,
      The iron-armed pitcher,
      The stout-hearted pitcher,
      Who finished the game.
      --George Phair

    • @mikewhitney8615
      @mikewhitney8615 3 года назад +1

      @@tahoepoet Great poem, tahoe, and so true. All of baseball's true warriors are gone.

  • @duderino57
    @duderino57 6 лет назад +2

    Wow. I was 8. Blast from the past. It’s a shame there’s no commercials. I’d like to see how they pitched us in the old days. Koufax made me want to play baseball. Too bad I wasn’t very good.

  • @jholtgym
    @jholtgym 10 лет назад +4

    2014 World Series starts next week (KC_SF) and one guy from THIS game a half-century ago is STILL at the same job.....the timeless, hopefully immortal Vin Scully!

  • @jimistreets1
    @jimistreets1 11 лет назад +2

    ...and of course pitching, which was beyond extraordinary that year. I went to my first Dodger game that year (I was 5) and I don't recall much but I do remember the crowd chanting "GO! GO! GO!" when Wills got on, then flipping out when he stole a base.

  • @timniles7526
    @timniles7526 10 лет назад +13

    Koufax was taking shots in his left arm to numb the pain, but when he retired, he said it was because he wanted to be able to use his left arm (at all.)

    • @arnoldsilveri1932
      @arnoldsilveri1932 3 года назад

      Koufax took anti-inflammatory medication for his arthritis. He rubbed capsolin cream on his arm before starting his games. It was supposed to increase the circulation. After each star, he iced his elbow.

  • @dominickclaflin5295
    @dominickclaflin5295 6 лет назад +2

    I love watching full history games

    • @oldiesgeek1
      @oldiesgeek1 6 лет назад

      Me too, especially when they show the original commercials.

  • @raulmacias1311
    @raulmacias1311 5 лет назад +5

    Where are the original broadcasts from the 1960~1967? I've seen part of Game 7 of the 1960 World Series and this Game 7 of the 1965 World Series. I'd like to see Game 5 of the '65 World Series where Sandy Koufax shutout the Twins at Los Angeles Dodger Stadium 7~0! Even though the Dodgers lost, I would like to view the 1966 World Series. I saw Koufax pitch against the Houston Astros at Dodger Stadium in '65 and I must say it was a religious experience! I couldn't believe I was in the presence of the great Sandy Koufax! I was mesmerized! Watching him on the mound going into his classic windup was spellbinding! He was such a competitor! Koufax was transcendent! I'll never forget that game as long as I live!

    • @Lava1964
      @Lava1964 4 года назад

      Sadly, at the time live sports broadcasts were often not recorded for posterity. What you are seeing here is a kinescope--a recording of a television picture--that was made by someone somewhere. Even after videotapes became common, sports broadcasts were often taped over with other programming as a money-saving measure.

    • @MrStormbruiser
      @MrStormbruiser 3 года назад

      1965 Game 5 ruclips.net/video/ib8C3g4AAWs/видео.html

  • @Gregoryt700
    @Gregoryt700 10 лет назад +5

    Thanks for posting. A legendary game, unfortunately I only heard about Koufax from my uncles. Not old enough to have seen this

    • @FlynnRider4
      @FlynnRider4 10 лет назад +1

      Both had tragic but triumphant careers,

    • @TheTweeter53
      @TheTweeter53 9 лет назад +3

      Gregoryt700 I was old enough to remember this series. Games were all on in the afternoon on NBC television. I watched this series in black and white, although it was available in color to the few who had color tv. We would rush home from school to be able to view the last 3 or 4 innings on tv. It was a different time.

  • @claudiacotner1638
    @claudiacotner1638 8 лет назад +6

    This guy named Koufax was awesome!

    • @thomaspaulgames77
      @thomaspaulgames77 8 лет назад +3

      That line makes me cringe

    • @dannysunay8099
      @dannysunay8099 4 года назад

      Claudia, meet mr. Koufax. Mr. Koufax, meet your no. 1 fan.😏🤪

    • @kennethdunlap6152
      @kennethdunlap6152 4 года назад

      You should see him when he was throwing curveballs past Mantle and Berra.

    • @claudiacotner1638
      @claudiacotner1638 4 года назад

      Kenneth Dunlap He didn’t face Berra in the 63 series. Yogi was retired, but that curveball had Mantje shaking his head throughout the series. I watched it being almost 70 now!.. Unfortunately, he is like so many ex players now. He doesn’t give fans the right time. How sad!..Maurice H

  • @dphotos007
    @dphotos007 2 года назад +1

    I noticed Maury Wills was not wearing a batting helmet. Now that is old school. I feel Maury Wills belongs in the Hall of Fame. He was the master of the steal and was the best all time base stealer of all time during his playing years.

  • @jln55
    @jln55 11 лет назад +3

    Oh, and Vin Scully and Ray Scott! This is great!

    • @MrDougman59
      @MrDougman59 10 лет назад +1

      Ray Scott was truly great. My favorite memory of play by play was not a professional game but the 1976 Minnesota State High School Basketball Championship. Hearing him saying that a school mate of scored was classic.

  • @lakemichigan6598
    @lakemichigan6598 4 года назад +1

    I was 'sick' from school that day in 1965 and got to watch this game. Didn't realize it would be Koufax's final pitching performance. I just remember once the Dodgers got the lead, Koufax began daring the Twins to hit his fastball and they couldn't. Kaat was from Zeeland, MI, half an hour from my hometown Grand Rapids.

    • @mickeyjudge7298
      @mickeyjudge7298 4 года назад

      Koufax retired after the 1966 season.

    • @lakemichigan6598
      @lakemichigan6598 4 года назад +1

      @@mickeyjudge7298 Well, then I guess it wasn't his last start after all. I really thought it was.

  • @imapaine-diaz4451
    @imapaine-diaz4451 5 лет назад +5

    Ahh, the hero's of my youth. I was at game four with my brothers and my dad. He must have spent a month's salary to take us to that game. I insisted on wearing 53 all through my highschool career and had a sidearm fastball with the same results.

  • @RFToob
    @RFToob 2 года назад +1

    Everyone in stands wearing jackets and ties and hats. That’s class man.

  • @leafyutube
    @leafyutube 11 лет назад +21

    Kaufax pitched practically the entire game with nothing but fastballs and still managed a 3 hitter. Very impressive.

    • @paulknowles1763
      @paulknowles1763 Год назад

      It was a complete 3 hit shutout by Koufax. Best lefty ever for about 5 or 6 years.

  • @BigRed6171
    @BigRed6171 2 года назад +1

    We’ll miss you Vin!!!!

  • @davidchodds
    @davidchodds 2 года назад +3

    Koufax & Kershaw dominated regular seasons for a decade leading the world in K's, IP, ERA. The biggest difference is that Koufax actually elevated his already tremendous game in the post season, while Kershaw repeatedly was worse in the playoffs to the point of choking year after year after disappointing year.

    • @paulknowles1763
      @paulknowles1763 Год назад +1

      True words! Sandy got better as the competition got stronger.

  • @Tanamarito
    @Tanamarito 7 лет назад +4

    I´m always wondering why Jim Kaat was not elected to the Hall of Fame. He has close to 300 wins under his belt, completing more games in his career than perhaps all current pitchers put together have completed. He was also a gifted athlete, an outstanding fielder an a durable player as well. At age 35 and 38 he made a come back in Chicago, winning over 20 games two seasons in a row while playing for a mediocre team. I think his record should be acknowledged way more than Bruce Sutter or any DH or specialist who is enshrined to the HOF for some kind of specific achievement. I hope he will be voted in while he is still with us, although I am not crossing my fingers.

    • @jimanderson7648
      @jimanderson7648 5 лет назад +1

      he should be in there . thats y i always say voting in hall of fame should be done by retired players, coaches and managers not a bunch of writers who never played the game.

    • @michaelleroy9281
      @michaelleroy9281 Год назад

      Jim Kaat, along with Tony Oliva got into the Hall of Fame in 2022

  • @GeorgeVreelandHill
    @GeorgeVreelandHill 10 лет назад +3

    This is classic stuff.
    I would love to watch this on an old B&W TV.
    Talk about going back in time.
    George Vreeland Hill

    • @dariowiter3078
      @dariowiter3078 5 лет назад

      Do you have to sound like a cliché, George? 😠

    • @ttownkeith
      @ttownkeith 4 года назад +2

      @@dariowiter3078 4 ugly replies. You must be a joy to live with.

    • @dannysunay8099
      @dannysunay8099 4 года назад

      Play it on the biggest tv screen you have!

  • @kenyongray2615
    @kenyongray2615 3 года назад

    This was a great series. Sandy Koufax for his best 5 year period before his retirement could have been the best pitcher in baseball history. Jim Kaat pitched forever after this game. Tony Oliva was headed to the Hall of Fame before his knee problems. Harmon Killebrew was one of the nicest men to ever walk this Earth. Earl Battey did the feature speech one year at my high school Sports Award banquet. He was a super nice man. Maury Wills was a very good player but not even close to the Hall of Fame. He did have over 2000 hits but no power at all with a .661 OPS. He was also an average to bad fielder at short. He had one thing going for him and that was speed. He is in the speed HOF no doubt. Thanks for these great older videos of past World Series games. Tremendous to see this game again. Vince Scully was the best. Ray Scott was more known for his pro football announcing and he said more with fewer words than any sports announcer.

  • @niccoarcadia4179
    @niccoarcadia4179 9 лет назад +16

    Can't afford Koufax's '65 Topps Card but I can watch him on YT for nothing. Ah, life is good...

    • @erikk.5202
      @erikk.5202 9 лет назад

      +Follow The Sun
      But I want that Topps card!

    • @niccoarcadia4179
      @niccoarcadia4179 9 лет назад

      I have a '63 Sandy, one of my top cards. I still bid on other years on ebay from time to time but I want only the ex+ or above cards. I just place my bid and cross my fingers. I've won many good cards with low bids. Luck? yeah I guess so. You should try it...I got my EX+ '63 for $9.00 two years ago. I was shocked but found out it does happen sometimes. You can get a $100-300.00 card for less than 25.00 if you keep trying. (and the timing is right)

    • @HughAskew2
      @HughAskew2 4 года назад

      @@niccoarcadia4179 As a 9 year, in 63, I traded the Topp's Dodgers' Big Three (Johnny Podres/Don Drysdale/Sandy Koufax) card for the 63 Koufax card.
      Kid I traded with thought I was nuts. Koufax was my man. Had to have his card!
      Wish I still had either one.
      Saw the Big 3 card in a shop 10-15 years ago.....for $300

  • @nyujay2010
    @nyujay2010 6 лет назад +1

    Great to watch pitchers go the distance. Now if a pitcher sneezes he's taken out of the game. Koufax even gave up a hit in the 9th and was still left in. Amazing!

  • @amergenthaler
    @amergenthaler 4 года назад +3

    Sandy Koufax bats in the ninth and gets a round of applause from the Twins fans before enters the batters box. Classy fans in Minnesota.

    • @josecarranza7555
      @josecarranza7555 4 года назад

      If they knew he was Jewish, would they still applause for Koufax?

    • @mstrunn
      @mstrunn 3 года назад

      @@josecarranza7555 Why wouldn't they have known?

    • @josecarranza7555
      @josecarranza7555 3 года назад

      @@mstrunn Anti semitism.

  • @garyoconnordbaairrepair7775
    @garyoconnordbaairrepair7775 4 года назад

    In my hometown of Roseville, CA. I became a Dodger fan during the 1963 World Series. I barely remember seeing this game on TV. I was living at Camp Pendleton at this time in 1965.
    Glad I found this game on RUclips.

    • @uncletony6210
      @uncletony6210 4 года назад

      I'm watching in Oceanside right now.

    • @garyoconnordbaairrepair7775
      @garyoconnordbaairrepair7775 4 года назад +1

      Uncle Tony from 1965 to 1068, I used live on Wire Mountain #3. My father was Sergeant in Charge of all Rifle, Pistol and Artillery Ranges for all 3 years.

  • @Chisox74
    @Chisox74 11 лет назад +10

    Hmmm... Do I go with Koufax or Drysdale in Game 7? God,I would have loved to have that problem. lol

  • @jonboxleitner7354
    @jonboxleitner7354 4 года назад +1

    Vin Scully interviewing Sandy Koufax. Too much.
    "Way out" Lou Johnson. What a class guy.
    Great film. Vintage uniforms. Vintage announcers. Epic players.

  • @jameshungelmann8129
    @jameshungelmann8129 8 лет назад +3

    I was there. A kid selling frosty male. So painful, the master handcuffed the Twins, his fastball got better and better as the game went on.

    • @tahoepoet
      @tahoepoet 7 лет назад +1

      I used to sell in the stands, too. 1967 All-Star game and saw Reggie Jackson's first home run....
      also saw Killebrew hit one to left that was still rising as it went past the lights and disappeared in the darkness. Figure it landed in Seattle.

    • @jameshungelmann8129
      @jameshungelmann8129 7 лет назад

      Wasn't that in 66 against the White Sox? I thought it hit the facade of the upper pavilion and they marked that spot in the MOA.

    • @toscodav
      @toscodav 6 лет назад

      Killbrew hit bombs in almost every major league park. Why do you assume he was at the Met?

  • @scottpoolsmith9573
    @scottpoolsmith9573 4 года назад +2

    Loved this as my Covid-19 baseball fix! Vin calling the game (at least half) and Koufax pitching a gem was what this old man needed! I loved the post game interview as well and the joy in Lou Johnson was awesome!

  • @Nestor123057
    @Nestor123057 6 лет назад +12

    An argument could be made for Maury Wills being in the Hall of Fame.

    • @steverenom.299
      @steverenom.299 4 года назад +2

      Is Tony Oliva in the Hall of Fame?

    • @LordofDublin4
      @LordofDublin4 4 года назад

      @@steverenom.299 ....he is not.

    • @LordofDublin4
      @LordofDublin4 4 года назад +1

      Not a Hall of Famer in my opinion. Good, solid shortstop, bunter and base stealer. But HoF not worthy.

    • @johnh23z
      @johnh23z 4 года назад

      Maury played for the Expos.

    • @LordofDublin4
      @LordofDublin4 4 года назад

      @@johnh23z .... and he played 2 years in Pittsburgh. He played maybe 40 games in Montreal.

  • @markthomas8198
    @markthomas8198 3 месяца назад

    I was a sophomore in high school and was able to attend game 7.What a treat.Sorry we couldn’t win but what a performance by Koufax.

  • @oldiesgeek1
    @oldiesgeek1 6 лет назад +5

    The picture of Koufax raising his arms at the top of this video, is from the final out against the Yanks in the 1963 World Series, not 1965.

  • @gcbrown1956
    @gcbrown1956 9 лет назад +1

    I am a lifelong Dodger fan, this team in particular is special. The Dodgers were still fairly new in Los Angeles back then, but 1965 was part of that first "golden" era in LA Dodger history after the team moved out from Brooklyn only seven years earlier. Indeed, there may have still been some "Brooklyn" guys on today's roster. Will have to research that some day. This was their 3rd Series win from the early LA years (after 1959 and 1963) and they would be back in 1966, only to be swept by Baltimore. I am old enough to remember this series, and was delighted when we won it in this game 7. Koufax was in his prime and today's performance when everything was on the line was simply remarkable. But I also would have been happy if the Twins won. Although I am Canadian, I have strong American connections in that most of my mother's family is American. Including, if only by coincidence, a grandmother who was born in Robbinsdale, Minnesota (a suburb of the Twin Cities), along with a couple of other aunts and uncles (her siblings) who were also born there. So given my Minnesota blood, had the Twins won this game - no problem. Although they didn't win today, the team would go on to win several Series in future, including 1987 and 1991. This is a fun game to watch, and a chance to travel down memory lane. As I write this in 2015, hard to believe it was 50 years ago. Enjoy!!

    • @curtisjones400
      @curtisjones400 9 лет назад +2

      gcbrown1956 Sandy Koufax was my favorite all time pitcher the first major lesgue baseball game i ever went to Sandy Koufax was pitching it was at Connie Mack Stadium in Philadelphia and Sandy pitched a brillant game aganist the Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jim Bunning when Kofax came out to the mound in the bottom of the 7th inning the Philadelphia crowd was so impressed with Koufax that they gave him a standing ovation true sportsmanship

  • @sciwiz57
    @sciwiz57 4 года назад +5

    Can you imagine today the manager leaving the pitcher in after a base hit in the ninth? Complete games, no Tommy John surgery, acting like grown men after they win, modest salaries, sane fans, no steroids, no buzzers- I was lucky enough to be only 11 years old when this game was played. I watched Sandy Koufax mow down my beloved Yankees in 1963- the Beatles, Mantle, Maris, bazooka Joe bubblegum, Little League games, Candy stores......... don’t live in the past but I was lucky to grown up back then compared to today.

  • @craigmckenzie5466
    @craigmckenzie5466 4 года назад +1

    I'm so glad baseball games aren't shown from up in the press box behind home plate anymore.

  • @m.s.769
    @m.s.769 4 года назад +4

    Classy, muted celebration. It was very professional. Nowadays, a team celebrates like crazy if they win the wildcard game. I prefer this example.

    • @Tookitout
      @Tookitout 4 года назад +2

      M S -Amen. Today’s look-at-me hysterics make sports hard to watch. NFL is worst offender. I gave up on it.

    • @johnperrigo6474
      @johnperrigo6474 2 года назад

      @@Tookitout It's all hype and no substance.

  • @joebarr725
    @joebarr725 3 года назад +2

    The dorks who run baseball have made sure that a pitching performance like Koufax in Game 7 will never come close to happening again.